Are Tourists Facilitators of the Movement of Free-Ranging Dogs?

被引:2
作者
Schuttler, Elke [1 ,2 ]
Jimenez, Jaime E. [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Magallanes, Sub Antarctic Biocultural Conservat Program, Teniente Munoz 166, Puerto Williams 6350000, Chile
[2] Cape Horn Int Ctr CHIC, OHiggins 310, Puerto Williams 6350000, Chile
[3] Univ North Texas, Dept Biol Sci, 1155 Union Circle 305220, Denton, TX 76203 USA
[4] Univ North Texas, Adv Environm Res Inst AERI, 1155 Union Circle 305220, Denton, TX 76203 USA
来源
ANIMALS | 2022年 / 12卷 / 24期
关键词
camera-trapping; Canis lupus familiaris; Chile; companion animal; invasive predator; protected area; questionnaire; South America; wildlife management; DOMESTIC DOGS; CANIS-FAMILIARIS; PROTECTED AREAS; NATIONAL-PARK; WILDLIFE; BEHAVIOR; CONSERVATION; PERCEPTIONS; COMPETITION; POPULATION;
D O I
10.3390/ani12243564
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Simple Summary Free-ranging dogs are of major conservation concern worldwide as they negatively affect wildlife. This is particularly true for the Global South, where dogs even roam free in and around protected areas. Whether tourists who visit those biodiversity-rich areas play a role in facilitating the access of dogs to nature is largely unknown. Using a combined approach of questionnaires with tourists and camera-traps along trekking trails in the Chilean Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, this study demonstrates that free-ranging dogs indeed followed tourists-even on several day trips-into protected areas. Although scientists and governmental agencies are aware of the problem and responsible pet ownership strategies are beginning to be implemented, the tourism sector must be explicitly integrated into wildlife conservation management strategies. Awareness campaigns promoting the confinement of dogs should be urgently implemented among tourism operators, hostel owners, and the tourists themselves-not only on behalf of wildlife but also to guarantee the attractiveness of green tourism destinations. Dogs are the most abundant carnivores on earth and, as such, negatively impact wildlife. Free-ranging dogs roam in many protected areas, which in turn are often tourist destinations. Whether tourists influence their roaming is largely unexplored but highly relevant to wildlife conservation. To address this question, we obtained (i) 81 completed questionnaires from tourists on their experience with free-ranging dogs in the remote Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, Chile, and (ii) photographs of three camera-traps placed next to trekking trails (n = 87 trap days). A third of the participants were followed by dogs for up to four days, and 39% saw free-ranging dogs on their hikes, but neither feeding dogs nor fear of them had any influence on whether tourists were followed by dogs. Camera-traps yielded 53 independent dog sequences, recorded 32 individuals plus 14 unidentified dogs, of which only one was leashed, with a frequency of one dog every 28(th) person. In 17% of 53 sequences, dogs were photographed together with hikers carrying large backpacks for several-day trips. We conclude that tourists are facilitators for the movement of dogs and highlight the importance of the engagement of the tourism sector in wildlife conservation in and close to protected areas.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Grandmotherly care: a case study in Indian free-ranging dogs
    Paul, Manabi
    Sen Majumder, Sreejani
    Bhadra, Anindita
    JOURNAL OF ETHOLOGY, 2014, 32 (02) : 75 - 82
  • [42] Free-ranging dogs assess the quantity of opponents in intergroup conflicts
    Roberto Bonanni
    Eugenia Natoli
    Simona Cafazzo
    Paola Valsecchi
    Animal Cognition, 2011, 14 : 103 - 115
  • [43] To be or not to be social: foraging associations of free-ranging dogs in an urban ecosystem
    Majumder, Sreejani Sen
    Bhadra, Anandarup
    Ghosh, Arjun
    Mitra, Soumitra
    Bhattacharjee, Debottam
    Chatterjee, Jit
    Nandi, Anjan K.
    Bhadra, Anindita
    ACTA ETHOLOGICA, 2014, 17 (01) : 1 - 8
  • [44] Temporal activity of rural free-ranging dogs: implications for the predator and prey species in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
    Carvalho, William Douglas
    Rosalino, Luis Miguel
    Godoy, Maira Sant'Ana M.
    Giorgete, Marilia F.
    Adania, Cristina Harumi
    Esberard, Carlos E. Lustosa
    NEOBIOTA, 2019, (45) : 55 - 74
  • [45] Free-ranging dogs assess the quantity of opponents in intergroup conflicts
    Bonanni, Roberto
    Natoli, Eugenia
    Cafazzo, Simona
    Valsecchi, Paola
    ANIMAL COGNITION, 2011, 14 (01) : 103 - 115
  • [46] Genetic inference of the mating system of free-ranging domestic dogs
    Natoli, Eugenia
    Bonanni, Roberto
    Cafazzo, Simona
    Mills, Daniel S.
    Pontier, Dominique
    Pilot, Malgorzata
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 2021, 32 (04) : 646 - 656
  • [47] Movement of Free-Ranging Koalas in Response to Male Vocalisation Playbacks
    Jiang, Alex Zijian
    Murray, Peter
    Phillips, Clive
    Tribe, Andrew
    Ellis, William
    ANIMALS, 2022, 12 (03):
  • [48] Effects of a seismic survey on movement of free-ranging Atlantic cod
    van der Knaap, Inge
    Reubens, Jan
    Thomas, Len
    Ainslie, Michael A.
    Winter, Hendrik, V
    Hubert, Jeroen
    Martin, Bruce
    Slabbekoorn, Hans
    CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2021, 31 (07) : 1555 - 1562.e4
  • [49] Using natural marks to estimate free-ranging dog Canis familiaris abundance in a MARK-RESIGHT framework in suburban Mumbai, India
    Punjabi, Girish Arjun
    Athreya, Vidya
    Linnell, John D. C.
    TROPICAL CONSERVATION SCIENCE, 2012, 5 (04): : 510 - 520
  • [50] A dog-eat-dog world: predation and resource acquisition by free-ranging dogs around Ranthambhore Tiger Reserve, Rajasthan, India
    Mahajan, Prashant
    Khandal, Dharmendra
    Dhakad, Meenu
    Rasal, Vishal
    CURRENT SCIENCE, 2024, 127 (03): : 572 - 582