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Wild animals are changing their behaviour – after watching humans, reveals study

Mule Deer crossing the road in front of a car in Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge, in Denver. (Dr. Dave Kenny via SWNS)

By Stephen Beech

Animals in the wild are changing their behavior after watching humans, reveals new research.

Wild animals are changing their behaviour – after watching humans, reveals study

A Common Raven outfitted with leg bands and a GPS transmitter in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. (Matthias Loretto via SWNS)

Wild animals are changing their behaviour – after watching humans, reveals study

A white-tailed deer outfitted with a GPS tracking device peers into an automated camera trap in Staten Island, New York. (Dr. Dave Kenny via SWNS)

Wild animals are changing their behaviour – after watching humans, reveals study

Wild turkeys crossing the road in Staten Island, New York. (Dr. Dave Kenny via SWNS)

Wild animals are changing their behaviour – after watching humans, reveals study

A gadwall flies through an urban landscape. (Jeremy Cohen via SWNS)

Wild animals are changing their behaviour – after watching humans, reveals study

Mule Deer on a road in Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge in Denver. (Dr. Dave Kenny via SWNS)

Originally published on talker.news, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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