Herring gull aversion to gaze in urban and rural human settlements
Goumas, M; Collins, TR; Fordham, L; et al.Kelley, LA; Boogert, NJ
Date: 4 September 2020
Journal
Animal Behaviour
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
With an increasing human population and expansion of urban settlements, wild animals are
often exposed to humans. As humans may be a threat, a neutral presence, or a source of food,
animals will benefit from continuously assessing the potential risk posed by humans in order to
respond appropriately. Herring gulls (Larus argentatus) ...
With an increasing human population and expansion of urban settlements, wild animals are
often exposed to humans. As humans may be a threat, a neutral presence, or a source of food,
animals will benefit from continuously assessing the potential risk posed by humans in order to
respond appropriately. Herring gulls (Larus argentatus) are increasingly breeding and foraging
in urban areas, and thus have many opportunities to interact with humans. We recently found
that herring gulls take longer to approach food when being watched by a human. However, it
is not known whether aversion to human gaze arises from experience with humans, and
whether individual differences in responsiveness are a result of differential exposure. Here, we
test whether herring gulls’ responses to human gaze differ according to their age class and
urbanisation of their habitat. We measured the gulls’ flight initiation distance when an
experimenter approached with either a direct or averted gaze. Neither gull age class nor
urbanisation significantly influenced the effect of human gaze on flight initiation distance.
However, as recently fledged juveniles responded strongly to the experimenter’s gaze,
aversion to human gaze may not require extensive exposure to humans to develop. Gulls in
urban areas could be approached more closely than those in rural areas, consistent with
findings in other species. These results indicate that gaze aversion is present early in
development and that exposure to humans may influence gulls’ responses to perceived risk
from humans. Investigating the processes generating individual differences in responses to
humans will provide further insights into human-wildlife interactions and the effects of
urbanisation.
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2020. This version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/