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Scientific Article details

Title Sustainable close encounters: integrating tourist and animal behaviour to improve rhinoceros viewing protocols
ID_Doc 73538
Authors Muntifering, JR; Linklater, WL; Naidoo, R; Uri-Khob, S; Preez, PD; Beytell, P; Jacobs, S; Knight, AT
Title Sustainable close encounters: integrating tourist and animal behaviour to improve rhinoceros viewing protocols
Year 2019
Published Animal Conservation, 22, 2
DOI 10.1111/acv.12454
Abstract Tourism may benefit conservation, but some wildlife viewing practices threaten the sustainability of both business and conservation initiatives. In north-west Namibia, conservation-oriented tourism provides tourists with an opportunity to encounter the critically-endangered black rhinoceros Diceros bicornis on foot. We used 123 tourist-rhinoceros encounters and employed a statistical modeling approach to: (1) identify the characteristics of human-rhinoceros encounters that caused rhinoceros disturbance and displacement; and (2) design rhinoceros-human encounter guidelines that improve sustainability. A model-averaging, information-theoretic approach identified tourist approach distance, viewing time and individual encounter exposure as the most significant predictors of rhinoceros disturbance level. A suite of rhinoceros viewing scenarios were modeled for acceptable disturbance risks, and adopted as a rhinoceros viewing policy. The policy reduced encounter displacements by 80% while maintaining a 95% positive feedback rating from guests. We demonstrate an evidence-based, policy-oriented management approach can help improve tourism's contribution towards the conservation of an endangered species.
Author Keywords conservation tourism; disturbance; ecotourism; evidence-based management; information-theoretic; rhinoceros; sustainable tourism; Diceros bicornis
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000466412800012
WoS Category Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
Research Area Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
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