“…Anthropogenic disturbances affect wildlife populations in many ways (Christiane Averbeck, Apio, Plath, & Wronski, 2009;Lindsey et al, 2013;Lunde, Bech, Fyumagwa, Jackson, & Røskaft, 2016;Matthias Waltert, Meyer, & Kiffner, 2011;Mathias Waltert et al, 2008). In response, animals may exhibit behavioural changes to minimise potentially negative impacts (Hunninck et al, 2017;Nyahongo, 2008;Tingvold et al, 2013). Vigilance, for example, may increase in response to threatening processes (Nyahongo, 2008;Tingvold et al, 2013;Matthias Waltert et al, 2011) and although this may reduce mortality risk, an increase in vigilance incurs costs as time spent on fitness-increasing behaviours is lost to vigilance (Holmern, Setsaas, Melis, Tufto, & Røskaft, 2016).…”