A meta‐analysis of human disturbance effects on glucocorticoid hormones in free‐ranging wild vertebrates

Author:

Pérez‐Ortega Betzi12ORCID,Hendry Andrew P.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. McGill University, Redpath Museum and Department of Biology 859 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal Quebec H3A 0C4 Canada

2. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute PO Box 0843‐03092 Panama Republic of Panama

Abstract

ABSTRACTFree‐ranging wild vertebrates need to cope with natural and anthropogenic stressors that cause short and/or long‐term behavioural and physiological responses. In areas of high human disturbance, the use of glucocorticoid (GC) hormones as biomarkers to measure stress responses is an increasingly common tool for understanding how animals cope with human disturbance. We conducted a meta‐analysis to investigate how human disturbances such as habitat conversion, habitat degradation, and ecotourism influence baseline GC hormones of free‐ranging wild vertebrates, and we further test the role of protected areas in reducing the impact of such disturbances on these hormones. A total of 58 studies met the inclusion criteria, providing 152 data points for comparing levels of GC hormones under disturbed and undisturbed conditions. The overall effect size suggests that human disturbance does not cause a consistent increase in levels of GC hormones (Hedges' g = 0.307, 95% CI = −0.062 to 0.677). However, when the data were analysed by disturbance type, living in unprotected areas or in areas with habitat conversion were found to increase GC hormone levels compared to living in protected or undisturbed areas. By contrast, we found no evidence that ecotourism or habitat degradation generates a consistent increase in baseline GC hormone levels. Among taxonomic groups, mammals appeared more sensitive to human disturbance than birds. We advocate the use of GC hormones for inferring major human‐caused contributors to the stress levels of free‐ranging wild vertebrates – although such information needs to be combined with other measures of stress and interpreted in the context of an organism's life history, behaviour, and history of interactions with human disturbance.

Funder

Organization of American States

McGill University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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