4.3 Article

Variation in human disturbance differentially affects predation risk assessment in Western Gulls

Journal

CONDOR
Volume 107, Issue 1, Pages 178-181

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1650/7607

Keywords

fight initiation distance; human disturbance; Larus occidentalis; predation risk assessment

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Many studies have demonstrated that birds behave differently in areas with different levels of human disturbance. Studies frequently characterize sites as having an overall level of human disturbance, and compare how birds respond at sites with high and low levels of disturbance. Doing so assumes that disturbance has a fairly constant effect on animals throughout a site. We measured the distance at which individual Western Gulls (Larus occidentalis) moved away from an approaching observer along a stretch of beach on both sides of the Santa Monica Pier, a heavily visited tourist attraction in southern California. We found that these flight initiation distances decreased in areas where more people visited the beach, and specifically in a small area near the pier. We found that flight initiation distance changed very rapidly within a short distance from the pier. Our results indicate that anthropogenic features may leave a behavioral footprint. Identifying the scale of such behavioral footprints should be an important goal of studies that seek to reduce anthropogenic impacts on birds.

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