Animals in national parks impacted by even just a few people

UngulateNerd92

Well-Known Member
10+ year member
Premium Member
People often visit U.S. national parks to catch a glimpse of wildlife. But how does our presence impact the animals we hope to see?

National park traffic has grown steadily over the past decade, and popular parks like Yosemite and Yellowstone can easily see over a million visitors a year. In these heavily used areas, one might expect animals to change their behavior to avoid humans.

But a new University of Washington-led study has found that even in remote, rarely visited national parks, the presence of even just a few humans impacts the activity of wildlife that live there. Nearly any level of human activity in a protected area like a national park can alter the behavior of animals there, the study found. The research was published Oct. 13 in the journal People and Nature.

“There’s been increasing recognition of how much just the presence of humans in these places, and our recreating there, can impact wildlife,” said senior author Laura Prugh, associate professor in the UW School of Environmental and Forest Sciences. “These results are striking in showing that really any level of human activity can have an effect on wildlife.”

The research team based its study in Glacier Bay National Park, a coastal area in southeast Alaska that is accessible only by boat or plane. Most visitors arrive on cruise ships, but the boats don’t dock on shore, and the park has very little human foot traffic. Because so few people visit each year — only about 40,000 but increasing — the park was an ideal place to locate this study, Prugh explained.

“Glacier Bay is a great park to explore what the lower limits are where humans start to affect wildlife behavior,” Prugh said.

Animals in national parks impacted by even just a few people
 
Animals are ultimately impacted by hunters, not tourists.

When animals are hunted, they start avoiding all humans and places and times where they can meet humans. So hunting has an effect far bigger than the actual number of animals killed, and away from actual hunting areas. In many cases, hunting equals habitat destruction, because animals don't use any place where are humans. There were good studies in the Netherlands on wintering geese, after the hunting was banned.

In North America, there is a recently popular concept of 'landscape of fear' created by wolves, but there is much bigger 'landscape of fear' created by human hunters.

One can see it when one travels as a tourist. In some regions, even in reserves and national parks, animals are invisible or run in panic from far away. In other regions, wild animals wander ridiculously close to humans.
 
Back
Top