Litcius/Paper detail

Energetics and fear of humans constrain the spatial ecology of pumas

Barry A. Nickel, Justin P. Suraci, Anna C. Nisi, Christopher C. Wilmers

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences87 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

), we calculated the short-term (i.e., 5-min) energetic costs of navigating both rugged physical terrain and a landscape of risk from humans (major sources of both mortality and fear for our study population). Both the physical and risk landscapes affected puma short-term movement costs, with risk having a relatively greater impact by inducing high-energy but low-efficiency movement behavior. The cumulative effects of short-term movement costs led to reductions of 29% to 68% in daily travel distances and total home range area. For male pumas, long-term patterns of space use were predominantly driven by the energetic costs of human-induced risk. This work demonstrates that, along with physical terrain, predation risk plays a primary role in shaping an animal's "energy landscape" and suggests that fear of humans may be a major factor affecting wildlife movements worldwide.

Topics & Concepts

Term (time)EcologyWildlifePredationEnergeticsAffect (linguistics)GeographyEnvironmental resource managementNatural resource economicsBiologyEnvironmental scienceEconomicsPsychologyCommunicationQuantum mechanicsPhysicsWildlife Ecology and ConservationAnimal Behavior and Welfare StudiesEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies