Date: October 2, 2018
Source: North Carolina State University
It's a
jungle out there in the suburbs, where many wild mammals are thriving near
humans. That's the conclusion of a large-scale study using camera trap images
from hundreds of citizen scientists in Washington, D.C., and Raleigh, North
Carolina.
The study
contradicts assumptions that developed areas have fewer mammals and less
variety in mammal species, says lead author Arielle Parsons, researcher with
the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and Ph.D. student at North
Carolina State University.
"We
found there wasn't a significant difference in mammal populations between the
suburban areas and the wild areas in terms of how many species used them and
the intensity with which they used those areas, which was very surprising to us,"
Parsons says. "That would seem to indicate that the impact of suburban
areas in particular is less dire for many mammals than we previously thought
and that perhaps there is a certain level of adaptation of mammals to
humans."
Researchers
worked with citizen scientists to monitor wildlife with camera traps placed at
more than 1,400 locations along a continuum of development based on population
density: wild, rural, exurban, suburban or urban sites. Their analysis included
areas with large forests, small forest fragments, open areas and residential
yards.
Backyard
wildlife watchers often catch glimpses of what Parsons calls the "usual
suspects" that showed up in images from the study: deer, raccoons, gray
squirrels, opossums and the occasional fox. But the cameras also captured some
surprising species.
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