Abstract

Intuition is a poor guide for evaluating the effects of human disturbance on wildlife. Using the endangered Yellow-eyed penguin, Megadyptes antipodes, as an example, we show that heart rate responses provide an objective tool to evaluate human disturbance stimuli and encourage the wider use of this simple and low-impact approach. Yellow-eyed penguins are a flagship species for New Zealand's wildlife tourism; however, unregulated visitor access has recently been associated with reduced breeding success and lower first year survival. We measured heart rate responses of Yellow-eyed penguins via artificial eggs to evaluate a range of human stimuli regularly occurring at their breeding sites. We found the duration of a stimulus to be the most important factor, with elevated heart rate being sustained while a person remained within sight. Human activity was the next important component; a simulated wildlife photographer, crawling slowly around during his stay, elicited a significantly higher heart rate response than an entirely motionless human spending the same time at the same distance. Stimuli we subjectively might perceive as low impact, such as the careful approach of a 'wildlife photographer', resulted in a stronger response than a routine nest-check that involved lifting a bird up to view nest contents. A single, slow-moving human spending 20 min within 2 m from the nest may provoke a response comparable to that of 10 min handling a bird for logger deployment. To reduce cumulative impact of disturbance, any human presence in the proximity of Yellow-eyed penguins needs to be kept at a minimum. Our results highlight the need for objective quantification of the effects of human disturbance in order to provide a sound basis for guidelines to manage human activity around breeding birds.

Highlights

  • Iconic species such as the Yellow-eyed penguin, Megadyptes antipodes, which are rare, endemic, and endangered (BirdLife International, 2012), are key draw-cards for nature-based tourism in southern New Zealand

  • Yellow-eyed penguin maintenance behaviours or natural stimuli can cause heart rate (HR) peaks comparable to those measured during human disturbance; the time needed to recover after natural excitation was short in comparison to the long recovery times following human disturbance

  • Human proximity was the most important factor for predicting HR responses to human disturbance stimuli, with no sign of recovery as long as a person was within sight

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Summary

Introduction

Iconic species such as the Yellow-eyed penguin, Megadyptes antipodes, which are rare, endemic, and endangered (BirdLife International, 2012), are key draw-cards for nature-based tourism in southern New Zealand. Yellow-eyed penguins exposed to unregulated visitor access show significantly reduced breeding success (Ellenberg et al, 2007) and fledge chicks at lower weights, which subsequently reduces first year survival (McClung et al, 2004; Ellenberg et al, 2007). As the growth of nature-based tourism is expected to continue unabated, it is important for ecological and for economic sustainability to minimize associated human impacts (Seddon and Ellenberg, 2008). Appropriate species- and sitespecific management decisions require rigorous research to understand the nature of disturbance-related impacts

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