Journal article

A rapid assessment of wildlife tourism risk posed to cetaceans in Asia

PLK Mustika, R Welters, GE Ryan, C D'Lima, P Sorongon-Yap, S Jutapruet, C Peter

Journal of Sustainable Tourism | CHANNEL VIEW PUBLICATIONS | Published : 2017

Abstract

Dolphin-watching tourism is growing globally. In developing countries, the typically low environmental awareness of operators and poorly enforced or non-existent regulations exacerbate risks to wildlife. Ecological indicators like behavioural responses are useful to assess wildlife tourism, but obtaining such data is slow and expensive. We modified the Driver–Pressure–State–Impact–Response (DPSIR) framework to rapidly assess the risk of dolphin-watching tourism harming, displacing or causing local extinction to dolphin populations, using human dimension data to complement limited ecological data. We assessed industries at seven dolphin-watching sites in six countries in Asia: Cambodia, India..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

We would like to acknowledge the organisers and sponsors of the 3rd Southeast Asian Marine Mammal Symposium (SEAMAM III, March 2013, Langkawi, Malaysia) and the Society of Marine Mammalogy for the 20th Biennial Conference on the Biology of Marine Mammals (December 2013, Dunedin, New Zealand). We also acknowledge the work of Nou Chanveasna, Lor Kimsan, Made Sudana and other volunteers who helped with data collection. G.E.R. was supported by the ARC Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions (CE1101014).