首页|Translocation in relict shy-selected animal populations: Program success versus prevention of wildlife-human conflict

Translocation in relict shy-selected animal populations: Program success versus prevention of wildlife-human conflict

扫码查看
? 2022 Elsevier LtdPast human persecution of wildlife has acted as a major selection agent shaping many animal features including behaviour. A major component of behaviour with diverse consequences for conservation is the shyness/boldness continuum. Shyer individuals are often geographically restricted, less prone to wander out of their ecological refuges but, on the contrary, less likely to experience human-induced mortality and lead to human-wildlife conflict. In this essay we discuss how the success of translocations may interact both positively and negatively with animal personalities, based on several case studies of re-introductions and reinforcements involving remnant mammal and bird populations. Although shyness may be inconvenient to conservationists when dealing with raptor translocations in which eventual dispersal may be a desired trait in the long run, a trade-off may emerge between boldness and prevention of human-wildlife conflict when dealing with large carnivores. Some other trade-offs may also occur, such as that between boldness and desired philopatry at the initial stage of re-introductions.

BoldnessDispersalHuman landscapesHuman-wildlife conflictShynessWildlife translocations

Martinez-Abrain A.、Quevedo M.、Serrano D.

展开 >

Universidade da Coru?a Department of Biology

Departamento de Biología de Organismos y Sistemas/UMIB Universidad de Oviedo

Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas Estación Biológica de Do?ana (EBD-CSIC) Department of Conservation Biology

2022

Biological Conservation

Biological Conservation

SCI
ISSN:0006-3207
年,卷(期):2022.268
  • 4
  • 76