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Alpine ungulates adjust diel activity to the natural return of wolves amid anthropogenic pressures
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  • Charlotte Vanderlocht,
  • Valerio Donini,
  • Andrea Corradini,
  • Simone Dal Farra,
  • Benjamin Robira,
  • Andrea Gazzola,
  • Giorgia Galeotti,
  • Laura Limonciello,
  • Noemi Squillaci,
  • Maël Van Dam,
  • Giada Zeni,
  • Marta Gandolfi,
  • Elisa Iacona,
  • Lucrezia Lorenzetti,
  • Matteo Nava,
  • Federico Ossi,
  • Heidi Hauffe,
  • Francesco Ferretti,
  • Luca Corlatti,
  • Luca Pedrotti,
  • Francesca Cagnacci
Charlotte Vanderlocht
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione

Corresponding Author:charlotte.vanderlocht@gmail.com

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Valerio Donini
Stelvio National Park – Direzione ERSAF Lombardia
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Andrea Corradini
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Simone Dal Farra
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Benjamin Robira
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Andrea Gazzola
Association for the Conservation of Biological Diversity (ACDB)
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Giorgia Galeotti
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Laura Limonciello
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Noemi Squillaci
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Maël Van Dam
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Giada Zeni
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Marta Gandolfi
Stelvio National Park Office – Sustainable Development and Protected Areas Service
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Elisa Iacona
Stelvio National Park – Direzione ERSAF Lombardia
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Lucrezia Lorenzetti
Stelvio National Park – Direzione ERSAF Lombardia
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Matteo Nava
Stelvio National Park – Direzione ERSAF Lombardia
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Federico Ossi
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Heidi Hauffe
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Francesco Ferretti
University of Siena
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Luca Corlatti
University of Freiburg
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Luca Pedrotti
Stelvio National Park Office – Sustainable Development and Protected Areas Service
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Francesca Cagnacci
Fondazione Edmund Mach Centro Ricerca e Innovazione
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Abstract

As wolves recolonise their historical range across Europe, ungulates face predation once more – but in landscapes profoundly altered by human activity. This shift raises crucial questions about their capacity to express adaptive antipredator behaviors. Using a quasi-experimental camera-trap design, we examined diel activity responses in ungulates along the ongoing wolf recolonisation in the south-eastern Alps. In summer, red deer gradually increased diurnal activity by 17.6% within a decade of wolf establishment, also heightening activity overlap with humans. This ‘diel shield effect’ disappeared when human hunting occurred. Roe deer adjusted diel activity only to hunting, while Alpine chamois only responded to spatial distribution of outdoor activity. Our findings show that wolf recovery can induce immediate and lasting diel activity shifts in large herbivores, yet responses may strongly depend on species biology and plasticity. Human risk can offset or override these behavioural responses, potentially altering the ecosystemic effects of returning large carnivores.