Ineffectiveness of a marine sanctuary zone to protect burrunan dolphins (Tursiops australis sp.nov.) from commercial tourism in Port Phillip Bay, Australia

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Howes, Leia, Scarpaci, Carol and Parsons, Edward Christien M (2012) Ineffectiveness of a marine sanctuary zone to protect burrunan dolphins (Tursiops australis sp.nov.) from commercial tourism in Port Phillip Bay, Australia. Journal of Ecotourism, 11 (3). pp. 188-201. ISSN 1472-4049 (print) 1747-7638 (online)

Abstract

Over the past two decades, considerable growth in commercial cetacean-based tourism has exposed coastal cetacean populations to high vessel density. Since 1989, Port Phillip Bay, Victoria, Australia, has hosted a thriving dolphin-swim tourism industry comprised of three licensed vessels. This study assessed the effectiveness of the Ticonderoga Bay Sanctuary Zone, a protected area enacted under the Wildlife (Whales) Regulations 1998, to serve the resident dolphins as an area of ‘respite’ and ‘refuge’ from anthropogenic stress, including commercial tourism. Research was conducted onboard 104 dolphin-swim tours, with both tour operation and dolphin school behaviour recorded using a combination of continuous observations and 1-min scan samples. During all observed encounters within the sanctuary zone, tour operations contravened the site-specific minimal approach distance regulation. By also contravening generic permit conditions (compliance range 0–70%) to the level of unsatisfactory compliance consistent with that documented outside the sanctuary zone, tour operations did not exercise any additional caution during a dolphin encounter within the sanctuary zone. Recommendations for this industry include a shift from sole reliance on passive management strategies to a judicious management plan that includes enforcement to support the governing regulations.

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Item type Article
URI https://vuir.vu.edu.au/id/eprint/23318
DOI 10.1080/14724049.2012.713362
Official URL http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/1472404...
Subjects Historical > FOR Classification > 0502 Environmental Science and Management
Historical > FOR Classification > 1506 Tourism
Current > Division/Research > College of Science and Engineering
Keywords ResPubID25642, wildlife tourism, ecotourism, management, compliance, sanctuary zone, dolphins, dolphin-swim, swimming, monitoring, tour vessels, marine parks, environmental protection, conservation, tourists, Port Phillip Bay, Victoria
Citations in Scopus 25 - View on Scopus
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