Animals (Mar 2023)

Monitoring of Alarm Reactions of Red Deer (<i>Cervus elaphus</i>) in a Captive Population in Paneveggio Pale di San Martino Natural Park

  • Sara Moscatelli,
  • Alessandro Malfatti,
  • Federico Maria Tardella,
  • Cesare Pacioni,
  • Daniele Catorci,
  • Paola Scocco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13050903
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 903

Abstract

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The study analyzes red deer responses to disturbances during the day and different exposures to tourists, to establish the more appropriate times to carry out activities inside the Paneveggio deer enclosure. The alarm reactions of red deer were observed after presenting different types of visual stimuli inside and outside the fence, in order to answer some questions: Which stimuli produce the strongest reactions from the animals? Do animals differently react to stimuli presented outside and inside the fence? On which days and times are the animals more sensitive to disturbances? Are there different reactions between the males and females? The results suggest that the red deer adversely react to the disturbance at different degrees of intensity in relation to day, sex, tourist and where the stimuli are presented. It was observed that during the days with the highest tourist presence, the animals were particularly alarmed; discomfort accumulation produced the highest number of alarm reactions on Monday. For these reasons, it would be opportune to manage the pasture on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, scheduled at specific times of day, preferably far from the estimated presence of tourists.

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