Ecotourism, in which travelers visit natural environments with an eye
toward funding conservation efforts or boosting local economies, has
become increasingly popular in recent years. In many cases it involves
close observation of or interaction with wildlife, such as when tourists
swim with marine animals.
Now, life scientists have analyzed
more than 100 research studies on how ecotourism affects wild animals
and concluded that such trips can be harmful to the animals, whose
behaviors may be altered in ways that put them at risk.
The research is published Oct. 9 in the journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution.
Protected
areas around the globe receive a total of more than 8 billion visits
each year. “This massive amount of nature-based and ecotourism can be
added to the long list of drivers of human-induced rapid environmental
change,” said Daniel Blumstein, the study’s senior author and professor and chair of ecology and evolutionary biology at UCLA.
The
presence of humans changes the way animals behave, and those changes
may make them more vulnerable — to poachers, for one, but also in less
obvious ways, said Blumstein, who is also a professor in the Institute
of the Environment and Sustainability in the UCLA College.
When
animals interact in seemingly benign ways with humans, they may let down
their guard, Blumstein said. As animals learn to relax in the presence
of humans, they may become bolder in other situations; if this transfers
to their interactions with predators, they are more likely to be
injured or killed.
The presence of humans can also discourage
natural predators, creating a kind of safe haven for smaller animals
that may make them bolder. For example, when humans are nearby, vervet
monkeys have fewer run-ins with predatory leopards. And in Grand Teton
National Park, elk and pronghorns in areas with more tourists are less
alert and spend more time eating, Blumstein and his colleagues report.
Interacting
with people can cause significant change in the characteristics of
various species over time. “If individuals selectively habituate to
humans — particularly tourists — and if invasive tourism practices
enhance this habituation, we might be selecting for or creating traits
or syndromes that have unintended consequences, such as increased
predation risk,” the researchers write. “Even a small human-induced
perturbation could affect the behavior or population biology of a
species and influence the species’ function in its community.”
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