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Science Quickly

Pinnipeds Don't Appreciate Biped Disturbance

Science Quickly

Scientific American

Science

4.41.4K Ratings

🗓️ 29 May 2018

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sea lions and fur seals in Uruguay have become a tourist attraction—but the animals have become less, not more, accepting of humans. Jason G. Goldman reports.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is a scientific Americans 60 Second Science. I'm Jason Goldman.

0:06.0

Cabo Polonio is a small seaside village on Uruguay's Atlantic coast.

0:12.0

The permanent year-round population is just 95 people living in around 50 homes.

0:19.0

Another 350 homes are used between December and February by tourists hoping to see Pinapeds.

0:27.0

Fur seals and sea lions that haul out on the town's rocky cape.

0:37.0

In January alone, more than 30,000 tourists visit.

0:41.0

What are the impacts of so many tourists on these marine mammals?

0:46.0

Between 1996 and 2014, European and South American biologists monitored both the animals and the people to find out.

0:55.6

Over that time span, the Pinnipad's tolerance for human disturbance declined.

1:00.6

When annoyed, they moved further away from the tourist viewing area, or even dive back in the water to swim away.

1:07.0

Those responses are contrary to the common assumption that wildlife becomes habituated to human activities.

1:15.4

The study is in the journal Applied Animal Behavior Science.

1:20.4

The researchers think that a fence, initially constructed in the late 1990s, is to blame.

1:26.9

It was built with good intentions to keep people a safe distance from the colony, but the fence

1:32.3

isn't long enough to keep people away from the colony, but the fence isn't long enough to keep people away from the most critical part of the habitat.

1:37.0

It might even funnel people towards that area as they try to find viewing spots closer than the fence would allow.

1:44.4

Or it could be that the fence actually does its job keeping people away.

1:48.7

But as a result, they are just far enough away that the animals never really get used to them. The truth is that

1:56.6

Pinipeds seem to be doing well in Uruguay. While the amount of animals in the rookery varies day by day, the best estimate is there's

2:05.1

now around a thousand of them, more than there were 20 years ago.

2:10.0

But it's hard to say whether tourism has played any role in that increase.

2:14.7

The animals have also become protected from hunting under Uruguayan law.

...

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