Is TikTok a gold mine for animal behavior specialists?

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TikTok plays host to millions of videos featuring animals -- both domestic and wild. The #animal hashtag currently totals some 74.9 billion views on the Chinese application! This represents a real gold mine for ethologists, researchers who study the behavior of animals.

TikTok plays host to millions of videos featuring animals -- both domestic and wild. The #animal hashtag currently totals some 74.9 billion views on the Chinese application! This represents a real gold mine for ethologists, researchers who study the behavior of animals.

The Tibetan Plateau in Central Asia is home to many wild animals. It's not uncommon to see wolves, yaks and sheep in the area. Their presence sometimes results in conflicts that Tibetan shepherds and farmers capture on video with their smartphones. These videos have become a valuable tool for ethologists, as revealed by a study recently published in the journal Conservation Society and Practice.

An international team of researchers used some 200 videos, available on TikTok and other social networks, to look at human-wildlife interactions in the Sanjiangyuan region. They showed gray wolves, snow leopards and brown bears in their natural environment.

Scientists found that in most of the videos they examined these animals tend to avoid humans. But a quarter of them show the damage these creatures can cause, from destruction of agricultural crops to carnivores' attacks on livestock. "Wolves used to run away from humans, but now they would not -- herders want to record this behavior," a local resident told the researchers.

Not all animals on the Tibetan plateau react the same way to the presence of humans. For example, brown bears seem to be much more curious than gray wolves and snow leopards about human facilities and objects. Tibetans have filmed them trying to open doors and cans, or trying to get into tents. Some even saw them trapped in large plastic barrels, used by Sanjiangyuan farmers to store yak butter.

The researchers say that videos of wildlife found on social networks could provide insights for better human and wildlife coexistence. "Analyzing such videos not only helps conservationists understand human–wildlife encounters from local perspectives but also reveals emerging challenges and potential opportunities for coexistence efforts," they explain. In addition, these amateur recordings provide valuable information about little-studied species.

© Agence France-Presse