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R. Wells, Jason Allen, S. Hofmann, K. Bassos‐Hull, D. Fauquier, N. Barros, Ruth DeLynn, G. Sutton, Victoria Socha, Michael Scott (2008)
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Petra Cunningham-Smith, D. Colbert, R. Wells, T. Speakman (2006)
Evaluation of Human Interactions with a Provisioned Wild Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) near Sarasota Bay, Florida, and Efforts to Curtail the InteractionsAquatic Mammals, 32
Jessica Powell, R. Wells (2011)
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R. Brill (2000)
Animal training: successful animal management through positive reinforcement
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The social side of human–wildlife interaction: wildlife can learn harmful behaviours from each otherAnimal Conservation, 15
(2003)
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To beg or not to beg? Testing the effectiveness of enforcement and education activities aimed at reducing human interactions at a hotspot near Sarasota Bay
Read the Feature Paper: The social side of human‐wildlife interaction: wildlife can learn harmful behaviours from each other Other Commentaries on this paper: Wildlife social learning should inform sustainable tourism management; Conservation issues arising from maladaptive behaviours spreading socially Response from the authors: Social learning of risky behaviour: importance for impact assessments, conservation and management of human‐wildlife interactions
Animal Conservation – Wiley
Published: Oct 1, 2012
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