Inappropriate tourist behavior in protected areas can lead to wildlife road-kills.

Tourism in protected areas is increasingly important to the economy of environmentally vulnerable countries. However, when pursuing sustainable tourism in protected areas, balancing the benefits of tourism with its associated impacts, including the increasing access (mainly through roads) to the last wilderness refuges, remains a challenge. Current projections of ecotourism development suggest a significant increase in the road network–both paved and unpaved roads–, as well as other improvements to the infrastructure network, within and between protected areas. In protected areas with limited freedom for people to walk or be outside vehicles, as in those African parks where the main attraction are self-driven safaris, river crossings are some of the main places where people can interact with and come close to wildlife. One of the greatest negative consequences of the massive increase in tourism in protected areas is the habituation of wildlife to humans, implying the loss of their perception of these tourists as potential predators. If confirmed, feeding by tourists could dramatically increase the risk of wildlife road-kill, one of the most important negative impacts of the car-dependent tourism.

Data and Resources

Cite as

Barrientos R. Ascensão F. y D'Amico M. Inappropriate tourist behavior in protected areas can lead to wildlife road-kills. Zoological Society of London Wiley-Blackwell, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1111/acv.12547

Clipboard Icon
Retrieved: 19 Jan 2025 19:35:18

Metadata

Basic information
Resource type Text
Date of creation 2024-12-02
Date of last revision 2025-01-19
Show changelog
Metadata identifier 2fe47500-3db7-551e-8baf-688326e59b50
Metadata language Spanish
Themes (NTI-RISP)
High-value dataset category
ISO 19115 topic category
Keyword URIs
Bibliographic information
Name of the dataset creator Barrientos, R., Ascensão, F. y D'Amico, M.
Name of the dataset editor Zoological Society of London Wiley-Blackwell
Other identifier DOI: 10.1111/acv.12547
Identifier of the dataset creator
Email of the dataset creator
Website of the dataset creator
Provenance
Lineage statement
Metadata Standard
Version notes
Version