The impact of road noise on the welfare of free-living juvenile white-footed mice

Grantee: Michael Sheriff

 

Institution: University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, United States

Grant amount: $60,000

 

Grant type: Challenge grants

Focal species: White-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus)

 

Conservation status: Least concern

Disciplines: Human-wildlife conflict, animal behavior, population ecology, mammalogy

 

Research location: United States


Project summary

This project will examine the impact of road noise on juvenile welfare in white-footed mice in Massachusetts. The project will focus on how road noise impacts the ability of juveniles to respond appropriately to the threat of predation (the most common cause of juvenile small mammal mortality). Preliminary work has shown that experimental manipulation of road noise (played at 62-65dB, which is equivalent to 100m into the forest from a major thoroughfare to Boston, MA) disrupts the normal foraging responses of (adult) small mammals to predation risk, possibly by masking their ability to perceive auditory cues of predators. Perception of predation threat will be experimentally manipulated by auditory playback of owl noises at sites near and far from the highway, paired with controls at the same distances from the highway but without auditory playback. Anxiety-related behaviors will be recorded in juveniles in an open field trap (which they voluntarily enter for feed), and their feces will be studied to assess physiological stress and nutritional status.

Why we funded this project

Road noise has dramatically increased and is potentially a major anthropogenic threat to wild animal welfare, and one which might be easily ameliorated through policy changes (e.g., improved sound barriers). This project is especially interesting because it focuses on a less obvious effect of road noise, potentially increasing the risk of predation by masking predator cues. This becomes even more interesting in the context of growing literature on the “ecology of fear,” sublethal effects of predators on prey behavior. If road noise makes prey unaware of risks, it could actually reduce their chronic stress despite exposing them to greater risk of death. We are excited for this project to explore those issues, although we are prepared for a complex result. Additionally, we wanted to support this PI because of their strong record of engaging students in their research and influencing their career trajectories.


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It takes guts to grow in the city: the role of the gut microbiome in the welfare of juvenile urban birds

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The impact of anthropogenic stressors on the affective state of juvenile Murray cod