Mammal responses to human recreation depend on landscape context
Solène Marion, Gonçalo Curveira Santos, Emily Herdman, Anne Hubbs, Sean Patrick Kearney, A. Cole Burton, Bogdan Cristescu, Bogdan Cristescu, Bogdan Cristescu, Bogdan Cristescu

TL;DR
This study shows that how mammals respond to human recreation depends on the surrounding landscape and management practices, suggesting that careful planning can reduce wildlife impacts.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel approach using multiple recreation measures and a Bayesian framework to assess mammal responses across species and landscapes.
Findings
Mammal responses to recreation are better explained by interactions with landscape factors than by recreation alone.
Higher trail density in areas with restrictive management increases mammal avoidance.
Responses vary by species and trail designation, but not consistently between motorized and non-motorized trails.
Abstract
Rapid growth in outdoor recreation may have important and varied effects on terrestrial mammal communities. Few studies have investigated factors influencing variation in observed responses of multiple mammal species to recreation. We used data from 155 camera traps, in western Alberta (Canada), and a hierarchical Bayesian community modelling framework to document 15 mammal species responses to recreation, test for differential responses between predators and prey, and evaluate the influence of local context. Factors characterizing context were trail designation (i.e., use by motorized vs non-motorized), management type, forest cover, landscape disturbance, and season. We used three measures to characterize variation in recreation pressure: distance to trail, trail density, and an index of recreation intensity derived from the platform Strava. We found limited evidence for strong or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedieval Architecture and Archaeology · Archaeological and Historical Studies · Historical Studies of Medieval Iberia
