“In areas with less strict lockdowns, we saw that animals travelled shorter distances,” said Thomas Mueller of Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre and Goethe University in Frankfurt, who designed the study with Tucker. “This may have to do with the fact that during those lockdowns, people were actually encouraged to go into nature. As a result, some nature areas were busier than before COVID-19.”

The study builds on knowledge from other research that’s been focused on specific species, including the appearance of crested porcupines in Italian neighborhoods and the movements of brown bear who encounter humans in the Eastern Italian Alps.

Yet little has been known previously about how human mobility rather than landscape changes affect animal species. The researchers said they made use of the “quasiexperimental” mobility changes from the COVID lockdowns, which offered a unique opportunity to study the effects of a sudden change in human interactions.

“Our research has shown that animals can respond directly to changes in human behavior,” says Tucker. “This offers hope for the future, because in principle this means that making some adjustments to our own behavior could have a positive effect on animals.”

Previously Published on sustainability-times with Creative Commons License

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