A new
paper reports that Foxlights, a brand of portable, intermittently flashing
lights, kept pumas away from herds of alpacas and llamas during a recent
calving season in northern Chile.
Herds
without the lights nearby lost seven animals during the four-month study
period.
The
research used a “crossover” design, in which the herds without the lights at
the beginning of the experiment had them installed halfway through, removing
the possibility that the herds were protected by their locations and not the
lights themselves.
Pulsating
lights placed around llama and alpaca herds warded off puma attacks during a
recent experiment in Chile, suggesting the method might help avert conflict
between herders and dwindling populations of the predator.
“The
implications are huge,” Omar Ohrens, a postdoctoral scholar in environmental
studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and lead author of a study on
the findings, said in an interview.
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