The price of success: integrative long‐term study reveals ecotourism impacts on a flagship species at a UNESCO site
0106 biological sciences
HUMAN DISTURBANCE
CONSERVATION
Mediterranean
106051 Verhaltensbiologie
ECOLOGY
01 natural sciences
12. Responsible consumption
MANAGEMENT
SDG 8 – Menschenwürdige Arbeit und Wirtschaftswachstum
14. Life underwater
CORTICOSTERONE
POPULATION
breeding failure
PANDION-HALIAETUS
disturbance
MARINE PROTECTED AREAS
TOP PREDATORS
SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth
106051 Behavioural biology
15. Life on land
Osprey
16. Peace & justice
GPS tracking
MPA
ecotourism
13. Climate action
8. Economic growth
SURVIVAL
Corticosterone
DOI:
10.1111/acv.12407
Publication Date:
2018-02-26T09:52:40Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
AbstractDisturbance of wildlife by ecotourism has become a major concern in the last decades. In the Mediterranean, sea‐based tourism and related recreational activities are increasing rapidly, especially within marine protected areas (MPAs) hosting emblematic biodiversity. We investigated the impact of ecotourism in the Scandola MPA (UNESCO World Heritage Site, Corsica island), on the population of a conservation flagship, the Osprey Pandion haliaetus. Over the 37‐year study period, tourists flow increased sharply. Osprey breeding performance initially increased, but then dropped for pairs nesting within the MPA compared to those breeding elsewhere in Corsica. We examined several hypotheses that could explain such reduction in breeding performance. Recent osprey breeding failures in the MPA are not caused by food scarcity. Using underwater fish surveys, we showed that fish consumed by ospreys were more numerous within the MPA. Focal observation at nests revealed that the overall number of boat passages within 250 m of osprey nests were three times higher inside the MPA compared to a control area. Elevated boat traffic significantly modified osprey time‐budgets, by decreasing prey provisioning rate by males, and increasing time spent alarming and flying off the nest in females. This caused stress, and corticosterone levels in chick feathers were three times higher in high‐traffic areas compared to places with lower touristic flow in Corsica, the Balearic Islands and Italy. Overall, our integrative, long‐term study demonstrates the negative impact of sea‐based ecotourism on the Corsican osprey population. This stresses the worldwide importance of rigorously implementing sustainable ecotourism, within well‐enforced MPAs.
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