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Do human–wildlife interactions predict offspring hiding strategies in peri-urban fallow deer?
by
Faull, Jane
, Conteddu, Kimberly
, Smith, Adam F.
, Amin, Bawan
, Ciuti, Simone
, Griffin, Laura L.
, Haigh, Amy
in
anti-predator strategies
/ artificial feeding
/ bedsite selection
/ Biodiversity hot spots
/ Dama dama
/ Deer
/ Ecology, Conservation, and Global Change Biology
/ Females
/ Food
/ Food selection
/ human–wildlife coexistence
/ human–wildlife feeding interactions
/ Lactation
/ maternal behaviour
/ Mothers
/ Offspring
/ Parks & recreation areas
/ Urban environments
/ Weaning
/ Wildlife
2024
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Do human–wildlife interactions predict offspring hiding strategies in peri-urban fallow deer?
by
Faull, Jane
, Conteddu, Kimberly
, Smith, Adam F.
, Amin, Bawan
, Ciuti, Simone
, Griffin, Laura L.
, Haigh, Amy
in
anti-predator strategies
/ artificial feeding
/ bedsite selection
/ Biodiversity hot spots
/ Dama dama
/ Deer
/ Ecology, Conservation, and Global Change Biology
/ Females
/ Food
/ Food selection
/ human–wildlife coexistence
/ human–wildlife feeding interactions
/ Lactation
/ maternal behaviour
/ Mothers
/ Offspring
/ Parks & recreation areas
/ Urban environments
/ Weaning
/ Wildlife
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Do human–wildlife interactions predict offspring hiding strategies in peri-urban fallow deer?
by
Faull, Jane
, Conteddu, Kimberly
, Smith, Adam F.
, Amin, Bawan
, Ciuti, Simone
, Griffin, Laura L.
, Haigh, Amy
in
anti-predator strategies
/ artificial feeding
/ bedsite selection
/ Biodiversity hot spots
/ Dama dama
/ Deer
/ Ecology, Conservation, and Global Change Biology
/ Females
/ Food
/ Food selection
/ human–wildlife coexistence
/ human–wildlife feeding interactions
/ Lactation
/ maternal behaviour
/ Mothers
/ Offspring
/ Parks & recreation areas
/ Urban environments
/ Weaning
/ Wildlife
2024
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Do human–wildlife interactions predict offspring hiding strategies in peri-urban fallow deer?
Journal Article
Do human–wildlife interactions predict offspring hiding strategies in peri-urban fallow deer?
2024
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Overview
Human activities can induce significant behavioural changes in wildlife. Often explored through extractive interactions (e.g. hunting) that can favour certain behavioural traits, the implications of non-extractive ones, such as wildlife feeding, remain understudied. Research shows that people tend to favour bolder individuals within populations despite their dynamics and consequences being unclear. Using fallow deer in a peri-urban environment, we studied whether mothers that show reduced fear of humans and consistently approach them for food adopt weaker anti-predator strategies by selecting less concealed fawning bedsites closer to human hotspots. This would provide the advantage of additional feeding opportunities in comparison with shyer mothers while keeping their fawns close. Our dataset encompassed 281 capture events of 172 fawns from 110 mothers across 4 years. Surprisingly, mothers that regularly accepted food from humans selected more concealed bedsites farther from human hotspots, giving their offspring better protection while also benefitting from additional food during lactation. Our results show behavioural adaptations by a subset of females and, for the first time, link the tendency to approach humans and strategies to protect offspring. Given previous findings that these begging females also deliver heavier fawns at birth, our research further investigates human–wildlife feeding interactions and their behavioural implications.
Publisher
The Royal Society Publishing,The Royal Society
Subject
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