Brown bear‐caused human injuries and fatalities in Russia are linked to human encroachment

[EN] Threat to human safety is the most dramatic conflict between humans and large carnivores. Although carnivore attacks are generally rare, bears are relatively often involved. Here, we reveal an association between human encroachment into the landscape, that is, increasing road density, and brown...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Animal Conservation
Main Authors: Kudrenko, Svitlana, Ordiz Fernández, Andrés Avelino, Stytsenko, Fedor V., Barysheva, Svetlana L., Bartalev, Sergey Aleksandrovich, Baskin, Leonid Mironovič 1939-, Swenson, Jon E. 1951-
Other Authors: Zoologia, Facultad de Ciencias Biologicas y Ambientales
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10612/23169
https://zslpublications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acv.12753
https://doi.org/10.1111/ACV.12753
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Summary:[EN] Threat to human safety is the most dramatic conflict between humans and large carnivores. Although carnivore attacks are generally rare, bears are relatively often involved. Here, we reveal an association between human encroachment into the landscape, that is, increasing road density, and brown bear-caused human casualties (injuries and fatalities) in Russia. In European Russia, the frequency of casualties correlated positively with bear population size and negatively with the presence of Siberian pine, a crucial bear food in the predenning period and a commonly gathered human resource. In Siberia, however, the number of casualties was not related to the number of bears, but it was positively associated with both road density and the presence of Siberian pine. Increasing casualties there were seemingly linked to increasing access to areas where both humans and bears concentrated simultaneously to harvest the same resource, edible pine seeds. The latter are more often collected commercially in Siberia than in European Russia. Our study shows the link between habitat degradation and human–wildlife conflict. Indeed, interacting effects of habitat change and coexistence with large carnivores deserve further attention, as we illustrate here for Russian forests; a wide boreal ecosystem where human encroachment can have severe repercussions for wildlife and ecosystem functioning at multiple spatial levels SI SLB and LB were financially supported by Russian Scientific Foundation, project 19-18-00562. FS and SB were financially supported by Russian Scientific Foundation, project 19-77-30015