Even in remote, rarely visited national parks, the presence of just a few humans affects the activity of wildlife that live there, a new study shows.
National park traffic has grown steadily over the past decade, and popular parks like Yosemite and Yellowstone can easily see over a million visitors a year. In these heavily used areas, one might expect animals to change their behavior to avoid humans.
But the new study in the journal People and Nature finds that nearly any level of human activity in a protected area like a national park can alter the behavior of animals there.
“There’s been increasing recognition of how much just the presence of humans in these places, and our recreating there, can impact wildlife,” says senior author Laura Prugh, associate professor in the University of Washington School of Environmental and Forest Sciences. “These results are striking in showing that really any level of human activity can have an effect on wildlife.”
The researchers based the study in Glacier Bay National Park, a coastal area in southeast Alaska that is accessible only by boat or plane. Most visitors arrive on cruise ships, but the boats don’t dock on shore, and the park has very little human foot traffic. Because so few people visit each year—only about 40,000 but increasing—the park was an ideal place to locate this study, Prugh explains.
“Glacier Bay is a great park to explore what the lower limits are where humans start to affect wildlife behavior,” Prugh says.
The researchers worked with the national park’s staff to design and implement an experiment that compared wildlife activity in areas used frequently by humans to areas where people were absent.
They installed 40 motion-activated cameras across 10 sites to capture detections of people and four animal species—wolves, black bears, brown bears, and moose—over two summers. By controlling where and when people could access certain areas of Glacier Bay and then measuring wildlife responses to the differing levels of human activity, the researchers identified two important thresholds.
First, if humans were present in an area, the cameras detected fewer than five animals per week across all four species studied. In most cases, this likely meant that animals avoided areas where humans were present. Second, in backcountry areas, wildlife detections dropped to zero each week once outdoor recreation levels reached the equivalent of about 40 visitors per week.
The apparent low tolerance wildlife had for the presence of people nearby surprised the researchers.
“It was eye-opening to see the number of wildlife sightings we are ‘missing’ just by recreating in backcountry areas of Glacier Bay,” says lead author Mira Sytsma, who completed this work as a graduate student.
“I was surprised that for all four species, wildlife detections were always highest when there wasn’t any human activity. So many people visit national parks for the chance to view wildlife, and that desire alone may reduce the chance of it happening.”
Though all four species showed some change in activity due to humans, wolves were most likely to disappear from cameras when people were around. Brown bears were the least impacted by human presence. Moose, however, were more active during the times of day and locations where people were seen. The researchers hypothesize that moose might be using humans as a protective shield from predators, opting to align their active hours with humans to avoid becoming prey.
The researchers expect that in parks where animals are more accustomed to seeing people, at least some individual animals won’t react as strongly to humans as in Glacier Bay. But the findings do shed light on a reality that’s likely playing out at national parks and wilderness areas across the country: More people are visiting these areas than ever before, and the presence of humans is almost certainly affecting the behavior of animals that live there.
“I expect that similar results could be found in other national parks, particularly those with relatively low visitation. I wouldn’t be surprised if more and more people seek out less popular national parks to explore, which will have interesting and important implications for park management and wildlife,” Sytsma says.
National parks and wilderness areas aren’t just seeing more visitors during the high season. More people are opting to use the trail systems during less-busy times to avoid crowds. Additionally, some parks are expanding their trail networks to accommodate more visitors.
The authors hope the study can help park managers consider different approaches to making parks accessible both to humans and animals. For example, managers could consider concentrating trails and human use in certain areas to reduce their total footprint, or put restrictions on the time of year or days in which people can visit.
“Our findings lend support to concentrating human activities in some areas, because if you’re going to go above zero human activity and it’s going to have an impact, you might as well go way above zero in some areas and then have other areas where you have almost no human activity,” Prugh says. “In those areas, then, wildlife can live their natural lives unaffected by people.”
Beth Gardner at the University of Washington and Tania Lewis at Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve are coauthors of the study. The National Park Service funded the work.
Source: University of Washington