Abstract

The ability of animals to adjust their behaviour can influence how they respond to environmental changes and human presence. We quantified activity patterns of terrestrial mammals in oil palm plantations and native riparian forest in Colombia to determine if species exhibited behavioural changes depending on the type of habitat and the presence of humans. Despite the large sampling effort (12,403 camera-days), we were only able to examine the activity patterns of ten species in riparian forests and seven species in oil palm plantations, with four species (capybara, giant anteater, lesser anteater and common opossum) being represented by enough records (i.e. n > 20) in both oil palm and forest to allow robust comparisons. Only capybaras showed an apparent change in activity patterns between oil palm plantations and riparian forests, shifting from being crepuscular in forest to predominantly nocturnal inside oil palm plantations. Further, capybaras, giant anteaters and white-tailed deer appeared to modify their activities to avoid human presence inside oil palm plantations by increasing nocturnality (temporal overlap widehat{Delta }ranged from 0.13 to 0.36), whereas jaguarundi had high overlap with human activities [widehat{Delta }=0.85 (0.61–0.90)]. Species pair-wise analysis within oil palm revealed evidence for temporal segregation between species occupying the same trophic position (e.g. foxes and jaguarundi), whereas some predators and their prey (e.g. ocelots and armadillos) had high overlaps in temporal activity patterns as might be expected. Our findings shed light on the potential behavioural adaptation of mammals to anthropogenic landscapes, a feature not captured in traditional studies that focus on measures such as species richness or abundance.

Highlights

  • The capacity of species to adapt to human activities will determine their chances of survival in the face of anthropogenic habitat change (Sih et al 2011; Wong and Candolin 2015)

  • The limited data restrain us from making inference to the whole assemblage, and results should be interpreted by species. This is the first study aimed to evaluate the influence of industrial agriculture on behavioural responses of mammal species in Colombia

  • We found no substantial differences in activity patterns between oil palm plantations and riparian forest, except for capybaras, which tended to modify their activities inside plantations, by becoming notably nocturnal

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Summary

Introduction

The capacity of species to adapt to human activities will determine their chances of survival in the face of anthropogenic habitat change (Sih et al 2011; Wong and Candolin 2015). Pardo et al 2016; Yue et al 2015) These are measures based on sample counts, or proportional contributions of individual species to overall individual counts, which are assessed against habitat variables such as area or type of land cover/use. Activity patterns are shaped by natural factors and physiological requirements of individual species, including requirements of thermoregulation, seasonal changes in temperature and moisture as well as biotic interactions such as competition and predator pressure (Halle 2006). Some mammal species can modify their activity patterns depending on the habitat type, presence of human activity, or size of patches. In the Brazilian Amazon, nine-banded armadillos (Dasypus novemcinctus) modify their activity patterns depending on the size of the fragments in which they occur, having strictly nocturnal activity in big fragments (> 1000 ha), but a more cathemeral pattern in smaller ones (Norris et al 2010)

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