Health
Proximity to humans make female pumas more lethal
Washington, Feb 14
Providing fresh insights
into human-animal relations, a new study shows that female pumas kill
more prey but consume less when they are near human territories.
The
presence of humans - homes, roads, and other development - means pumas
are fearful and stay on the move rather than returning to a kill site to
fully consume prey.
"We investigated how higher housing
densities influenced puma behavior at kills and how often they killed.
We found that female pumas spent less time feeding at kill sites as
housing increases," said Justine Smith, a PhD candidate at the
University of California, Santa Cruz.
The study is based on monitoring more than two dozen pumas in the Santa Cruz Mountains.
The effects can impact deer populations as well as puma breeding success.
The greatest impact on pumas was when their hunting territories were within 150 meters of human development.
Females killed an average 67 deer per year compared with nearly 44 for males whose ranges are around three times as large.
"Increased
kill rates may lead carnivores to waste energy and also influence prey
survival rates in human-modified landscapes," Smith noted.
"The
food loss and high energy costs due to human avoidance at kill sites is
compensated for by increasing kill rates," Smith concluded.
The study appeared in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.