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Dryad

The unique spatial ecology of human hunters

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Feb 07, 2020 version files 443.32 KB

Abstract

Human hunters are described as ‘superpredators’ with a unique ecology. Chronic Wasting Disease among cervids and African swine fever among wild boar are emerging wildlife diseases in Europe with huge economic and cultural repercussions. Understanding hunter movements at broad scales has implications for how to control their spread. Here we show, based on the analysis of the settlement patterns and movements of reindeer (n = 9,685), red deer (n = 47,845), moose (n = 60,365), and roe deer (n = 42,530) hunters from across Norway (2001-2017), that hunter density was more closely linked to human density than prey density, that hunters were largely migratory, aggregated with increasing regional prey densities and often used dogs. Hunter movements extended across Europe and to other continents. Our results provide extensive evidence that the broad-scale movements and residency patterns of post-industrial hunters relative to their prey differ from those of large carnivores.