| Literature DB >> 30680216 |
Mark A Ditmer1, Leland K Werden2, Jessie C Tanner3, John B Vincent4, Peggy Callahan5, Paul A Iaizzo6, Timothy G Laske6, David L Garshelis1,7.
Abstract
Unmanned aircraft systems (UAS; i.e. 'drones') provide new opportunities for data collection in ecology, wildlife biology and conservation. Yet, several studies have documented behavioral or physiological responses to close-proximity UAS flights. We experimentally tested whether American black bears (Ursus americanus) habituate to repeated UAS exposure and whether tolerance levels persist during an extended period without UAS flights. Using implanted cardiac biologgers, we measured heart rate (HR) of five captive bears before and after the first of five flights each day. Spikes in HR, a measure of stress, diminished across the five flights within each day and over the course of 4 weeks of twice-weekly exposure. We halted flights for 118 days, and when we resumed, HR responses were similar to that at the end of the previous trials. Our findings highlight the capacity of a large mammal to become and remain habituated to a novel anthropogenic stimulus in a relatively short time (3-4 weeks). However, such habituation to mechanical noises may reduce their wariness of other human threats. Also, whereas cardiac effects diminished, frequent UAS disturbances may have other chronic physiological effects that were not measured. We caution that the rate of habituation may differ between wild and captive animals: while the captive bears displayed large initial spikes in HR change (albeit not as large as wild bears), these animals were accustomed to regular exposure to humans and mechanical noises that may have hastened habituation to the UAS.Entities:
Keywords: Drone; bears; cardiac biologger; habituation; stress; unmanned aerial system
Year: 2019 PMID: 30680216 PMCID: PMC6331175 DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coy067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Physiol ISSN: 2051-1434 Impact factor: 3.079
Figure 1Differences between pre-flight baseline (95% upper CI of HR 30-min prior to first UAS flight of each day) and maximum HRs of five captive black bears (each point is a single bear; horizontal bars represent means of the bears) during exposure to the first UAS flight on each flight day (i.e. the flight eliciting the greatest response; see Fig. 2). We flew a quadcopter UAS 15 m over the bears’ enclosure 2 days per week, 4 weeks per season during spring and fall (16 flight-days). We considered habituation to have occurred when the mean of maximum elevations in HR remained below +10 bpm (dashed line). This occurred on flight day 5 (third week).
Figure 2Example of diminishing cardiac responses (difference from baseline [95% upper CI of HR 30-min prior to first UAS flight of each day]) of one of five captive American black bears to repeated UAS flights. Bears were exposed to 80 flights: five times per day on eight flight days in both spring and fall. Each point is the HR response to one of these eight flights (bars represent means) grouped by the first to fifth flight of each day for each season separately.