As climate change increases the frequency of droughts, UCLA and 麻豆传媒 researchers found one overlooked side effect: People report more conflicts with wildlife during drought, when resources are scarce.
For every inch that annual rainfall decreases, scientists found a 2% to 3% increase in reported clashes with a variety of carnivores during drought years, according to .
The researchers pored through seven years of data from the Wildlife Incident Reporting database, run by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The results are likely broadly applicable outside of California, said lead author Kendall Calhoun, a postdoctoral researcher and conservation ecologist affiliated with both UCLA and 麻豆传媒.
鈥淐limate change will increase human-wildlife interactions, and as droughts and wildfires become more extreme, we have to plan ways to coexist with wildlife,鈥 said Calhoun, a member of and of on ecology and conservation. 鈥淎nimals coming into human spaces are generally framed as wildlife trying to take resources from humans, but it鈥檚 often because we鈥檝e taken the resources away from the wild areas.鈥
Wildlife interactions don鈥檛 increase with all animals during droughts, but four animals stood out in the data. Across all ranges of precipitation, for every 1-inch decrease in annual rainfall, the researchers found reported conflicts increased:
- 2.1% for mountain lions
- 2.2% for coyotes
- 2.6% for black bears
- 3% for bobcats
What counts as 'conflict'
But what counts as a conflict?
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the big question, and it often depends on the person reporting it,鈥 Calhoun said. 鈥淚f you have birds in an agricultural area, they could provide ecosystem services like eating harmful insects, or they could be raiding the crops. One person might have sympathy for wildlife grazing from their tomato garden, while another person might call it property damage.鈥
Actual attacks on people are exceedingly rare and not included in the same database, Calhoun explained. In the study, the researchers analyzed reports to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife highlighting property damage and 鈥渘uisances,鈥 rather than reports categorized as lower-level 鈥渃oncerns鈥 or 鈥渟ightings.鈥
Climate-resilient landscapes for wildlife
So are there more coyotes moving through urban areas during droughts? It鈥檚 hard to say, Calhoun said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unclear whether the number of reports increases because there are subjectively more conflicts, or because people perceive wildlife more negatively when their own resources are more stressed,鈥 he said. 鈥淩egardless, it鈥檚 clear that climate change will mean more conflict between humans and animals if we don鈥檛 create more climate-resilient landscapes for wildlife.鈥
Studies have shown the benefits of creating such safe zones and other refuges for wildlife. Calhoun anticipates that the resources in those areas could dissuade animals from venturing into more human-dominated spaces.
鈥淣ow that we know how droughts make wildlife interactions worse, why couldn鈥檛 we make them better?鈥 he said. 鈥淢itigating how much water we take out of natural landscapes could mitigate conflict.鈥
There are few comprehensive databases collecting community-reported wildlife incidents, making the CDFW database used for the study a rare and valuable resource, Calhoun noted, without which his research could not succeed. It鈥檚 an important example of community-driven science, Calhoun said.
Calhoun鈥檚 research expertise focuses on megafires, and how climate-change driven fire trends influence animal habitats. Animals can often flee the fire itself, but to find food, water and shelter, they have to move into areas protected from the flames 鈥 and that often means into human-inhabited areas, Calhoun said.
鈥淚 look at ways to improve human-wildlife interactions, and climate change is going to make that path more difficult,鈥 Calhoun said. 鈥淏ut if we can make it worse, then we can make it better. People just need to be invested in their local environment to make conservation work.鈥
Media Resources
- Kendall Calhoun, UCLA/麻豆传媒, klcalhoun@g.ucla.edu
- Alison Hewitt, UCLA Institute of the Environment, Media Relations, ahewitt@stratcomm.ucla.edu
- Kat Kerlin, 麻豆传媒 News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu