Impact of human presence and activity on urban Eurasian red squirrels' innovative problem-solving
Affiliation
University of Chester; University of Oulu; Southern Medical UniversityPublication Date
2025-09-16
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Humans impact wildlife positively and negatively, and increasing evidence shows that humans potentially play a major role in shaping urban wildlife cognition. However, it remains unclear which, and how specific anthropogenic factors shape animal cognitive performance. Here, across 15 urban areas in Oulu, Finland, we investigated how varied levels of human presence nearby, types of human activity (walking, dog walking, cycling, and playground activities), and distance to the nearest footpaths influenced 64 squirrels’ innovative problem-solving ability – measured as the proportion of solving success at the site level, solving outcome at the individual level as well as individuals’ first-success latency. Higher mean human presence nearby and all measured human activities significantly decreased the proportion of success at the site level. Playground activity showed the highest negative impact on both the first and subsequent visit success rate at the site level. Increased mean human presence and walking decreased the likelihood of a squirrel successfully solving the novel food-extraction problem. Increased mean human presence also decreased individuals’ first-success latency, and dog walking was the outstanding factor affecting first-success latency. These results show the negative effects of specific human-related factors on an important cognitive trait, problem-solving ability. These factors may also potentially exert selective pressure on shaping urban wildlife cognition.Citation
Chow, P. K. Y., Loukola, O. J., & Solvi, C. (2025). Impact of human presence and activity on urban Eurasian red squirrels’ innovative problem-solving, Behavioral Ecology, 36(5), article-number araf104. https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/araf104Publisher
Oxford University PressJournal
Behavioral EcologyAdditional Links
https://academic.oup.com/beheco/article/36/5/araf104/8255741Type
ArticleDescription
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology.ISSN
1045-2249EISSN
1465-7279Sponsors
The University of Oulu; The Academy of Finland Profi Biodiverse Anthropocenes (Grant number: 24630100); Kone Foundation (Grant number: 202010852)ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/beheco/araf104
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- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International


