Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot

Knowledge about encounters between humans and wildlife is important for conservation, management and policymaking, as well as for reducing conflict and negative interactions. There is general concern that an increased number of encounters might reduce wildlife flight responses. I investigated the re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stenset, Nina Emilie
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Norwegian University of Life Science, Ås 2015
Subjects:
Fid
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/292907
id ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/292907
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
op_collection_id ftunivmob
language English
topic Brunbjørn
Ecology
spellingShingle Brunbjørn
Ecology
Stenset, Nina Emilie
Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot
topic_facet Brunbjørn
Ecology
description Knowledge about encounters between humans and wildlife is important for conservation, management and policymaking, as well as for reducing conflict and negative interactions. There is general concern that an increased number of encounters might reduce wildlife flight responses. I investigated the responses of GPS-collared brown bears (Ursus arctos) in southcentral Sweden when repeatedly encountering humans on foot. Brown bears are generally wary of humans, and I therefore hypothesized that their behavioural response would not change with the number of experimental encounters. Bears were approached by observers 2 – 3 times per week for 2 – 4 weeks. The observers simulated recreational forest users during the approach and passed the bear’s initial location on an average distance of 29 m. A total of 11 solitary females (7 subadults and 4 adults) and 14 solitary males (6 subadults and 8 adults) were subject to an average of 6.6 approaches (SD = 1.19). I analysed flight response as distance between bear and observer when bear flight initiation (FID) occurred, the distance fled and time spent active after disturbance, combined with measurements of horizontal cover at the bear’s initial location. Data was analysed using generalized linear mixed-effect models with bear individual as random effect. No significant relationships were found between the number of approaches conducted on an individual and flight response. FID could best be explained by horizontal cover, age of the bear, activity and the interaction between age and activity. No significant relationships were found for flight distance nor duration. My findings support the hypothesis that brown bears are wary of people and does not alter their flight responses when repeatedly disturbed by humans on foot. SAMMENDRAG Kunnskap om møter mellom mennesker og vilt er viktig for forvaltning, vern og utforming av retningslinjer, samtidig som økt kunnskap kan redusere konflikt og negative interaksjoner. Flere har utrykt bekymring for at et økende antall møter mellom mennesker og vilt kan redusere viltets fluktresponser. Jeg har eksperimentelt undersøkt hvordan GPS-utstyrte brunbjørner (Ursus arctos) i sentrale deler av Sverige responderer når de gjentatte ganger møter mennesker til fots. Brunbjørner er generelt sky og unngår konfrontasjoner, og min hypotese var derfor at deres adferds ikke ville endre seg med antallet eksperimentelle møter. Observatører nærmet seg bjørnene til fots 2 – 3 ganger per uke over en periode på 2 – 4 uker. De simulerte turgåere, og passerte bjørnens intielle posisjon med en gjennomsnittsavstand på 29 meter. Totalt 11 binner (7 unge og 4 voksne) og 14 hannbjørner (6 unge og 8 voksne) ble utsatt for i gjennomsnitt 6.6 eksperimentelle møter (SD =1.19). Jeg analyserte fluktrespons som avstanden mellom bjørn og observatør idet bjørnen flyktet (FID), avstand bjørnen flyktet og hvor lenge den forble aktiv etter forstyrrelsen. Sammen med målinger av horisontal dekning ble data analysert ved hjelp av generalle linære modeller med bjørneindivid som tilfeldig effekt. Jeg fant ikke noen signifikant sammenheng mellom antallet approacher utført på et individ og dens fluktrespons. FID kunne best forklares med horisontal dekning, bjørnens alder, bjørnens aktivitet og interaksjonen mellom alder og aktivitet. Ingen signifikant sammenheng ble funnet med fluktdistanse eller varighet. Mine funn støtter hypotesen om at brunbjørn skyr mennesker og utviser fluktrespons selv når forstyrret gjentatte ganger. M-ECOL
format Master Thesis
author Stenset, Nina Emilie
author_facet Stenset, Nina Emilie
author_sort Stenset, Nina Emilie
title Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot
title_short Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot
title_full Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot
title_fullStr Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot
title_full_unstemmed Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot
title_sort behaviour of brown bears (ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot
publisher Norwegian University of Life Science, Ås
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/292907
long_lat ENVELOPE(-65.939,-65.939,-68.664,-68.664)
ENVELOPE(12.585,12.585,66.082,66.082)
ENVELOPE(17.017,17.017,68.802,68.802)
geographic Fid
Bjørn
Bjørnen
geographic_facet Fid
Bjørn
Bjørnen
genre Ursus arctos
genre_facet Ursus arctos
op_source 34
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11250/292907
_version_ 1766231642546896896
spelling ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/292907 2023-05-15T18:42:02+02:00 Behaviour of brown bears (Ursus arctos) when repeatedly approached by humans on foot Stenset, Nina Emilie 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/292907 eng eng Norwegian University of Life Science, Ås http://hdl.handle.net/11250/292907 34 Brunbjørn Ecology Master thesis 2015 ftunivmob 2021-09-23T20:15:30Z Knowledge about encounters between humans and wildlife is important for conservation, management and policymaking, as well as for reducing conflict and negative interactions. There is general concern that an increased number of encounters might reduce wildlife flight responses. I investigated the responses of GPS-collared brown bears (Ursus arctos) in southcentral Sweden when repeatedly encountering humans on foot. Brown bears are generally wary of humans, and I therefore hypothesized that their behavioural response would not change with the number of experimental encounters. Bears were approached by observers 2 – 3 times per week for 2 – 4 weeks. The observers simulated recreational forest users during the approach and passed the bear’s initial location on an average distance of 29 m. A total of 11 solitary females (7 subadults and 4 adults) and 14 solitary males (6 subadults and 8 adults) were subject to an average of 6.6 approaches (SD = 1.19). I analysed flight response as distance between bear and observer when bear flight initiation (FID) occurred, the distance fled and time spent active after disturbance, combined with measurements of horizontal cover at the bear’s initial location. Data was analysed using generalized linear mixed-effect models with bear individual as random effect. No significant relationships were found between the number of approaches conducted on an individual and flight response. FID could best be explained by horizontal cover, age of the bear, activity and the interaction between age and activity. No significant relationships were found for flight distance nor duration. My findings support the hypothesis that brown bears are wary of people and does not alter their flight responses when repeatedly disturbed by humans on foot. SAMMENDRAG Kunnskap om møter mellom mennesker og vilt er viktig for forvaltning, vern og utforming av retningslinjer, samtidig som økt kunnskap kan redusere konflikt og negative interaksjoner. Flere har utrykt bekymring for at et økende antall møter mellom mennesker og vilt kan redusere viltets fluktresponser. Jeg har eksperimentelt undersøkt hvordan GPS-utstyrte brunbjørner (Ursus arctos) i sentrale deler av Sverige responderer når de gjentatte ganger møter mennesker til fots. Brunbjørner er generelt sky og unngår konfrontasjoner, og min hypotese var derfor at deres adferds ikke ville endre seg med antallet eksperimentelle møter. Observatører nærmet seg bjørnene til fots 2 – 3 ganger per uke over en periode på 2 – 4 uker. De simulerte turgåere, og passerte bjørnens intielle posisjon med en gjennomsnittsavstand på 29 meter. Totalt 11 binner (7 unge og 4 voksne) og 14 hannbjørner (6 unge og 8 voksne) ble utsatt for i gjennomsnitt 6.6 eksperimentelle møter (SD =1.19). Jeg analyserte fluktrespons som avstanden mellom bjørn og observatør idet bjørnen flyktet (FID), avstand bjørnen flyktet og hvor lenge den forble aktiv etter forstyrrelsen. Sammen med målinger av horisontal dekning ble data analysert ved hjelp av generalle linære modeller med bjørneindivid som tilfeldig effekt. Jeg fant ikke noen signifikant sammenheng mellom antallet approacher utført på et individ og dens fluktrespons. FID kunne best forklares med horisontal dekning, bjørnens alder, bjørnens aktivitet og interaksjonen mellom alder og aktivitet. Ingen signifikant sammenheng ble funnet med fluktdistanse eller varighet. Mine funn støtter hypotesen om at brunbjørn skyr mennesker og utviser fluktrespons selv når forstyrret gjentatte ganger. M-ECOL Master Thesis Ursus arctos Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU Fid ENVELOPE(-65.939,-65.939,-68.664,-68.664) Bjørn ENVELOPE(12.585,12.585,66.082,66.082) Bjørnen ENVELOPE(17.017,17.017,68.802,68.802)