摘要
研究发现,野生动物对人类活动比之前所想的更敏感我们有“人”的问题。那是几年前,劳拉·普鲁收到来自阿拉斯加冰川湾美国国家公园管理局的信息。对于在相对拥挤的华盛顿州研究人类与野生动物之间的互动的普鲁来说,这个主张似乎有点夸大其辞。毕竞阿拉斯加这个占地320万英亩的公园,每年只有40000人造访——对于习惯在像华盛顿州或俄勒冈州之喀斯喀特山区等地休闲旅游的人来说,这个数字少得离谱。
Study finds wild animals are more sensitive to human presence than previously thought We have a people problem.That was the message Laura Prugh received from the U.S.Park Service in Glacier Bay,Alaska,several years ago.For Prugh,who studies human-wildlife interactions in the relatively crowded state of Washington,the claim seemed a bit overstated.