Water-based ecotourism -- diving with sharks,
swimming with dolphins, snorkeling with whales
-- has gotten big over the past 20 years, and while it's
great for the local economies, what is its effect on the
animals on display?
To figure that out, Australian researchers examined
whether encounters between ecotourists and whale
sharks, classified as "vulnerable" on the Red List of
Threatened Species, had bad results. They studied
whale sharks aggregating at Ningaloo Reef in Western
Australia, where up to 500 of them, mostly young males,
feed between March and July. Using a photo database of
individually identified whale sharks (boat videographers
record each whale's sex, size and markings, and send
images to the Western Australia Department of Parks
and Wildlife), the researchers looked at 2,823 whalemeets-
boat encounters between 2007 and 2011.
The good news: Whale sharks aren't fazed by the
boats. The researchers discovered that total encounters
per whale shark and per boat trip increased over time.
On average, whale sharks sighted by boats in subsequent
years were encountered earlier, stayed longer,
and tended to be spotted by boats more often within
a season than sharks that were only encountered in
a single year. Whale sharks showed no patterns suggesting
boats disturbed them; in the years with more
boat trips, whale sharks actually appeared to leave the
scene at a slower rate.
The researchers say that individual whale sharks
returning to Ningaloo Reef become accustomed to
encounters with tourists, and their prior encounters
don't stop them from returning. It's unlikely that ecotourism
is affecting their breeding or foraging behaviors.
Sea temperature and plankton levels have more impact
on whether they stay or go. So, when you get wet, you
can assume the animals have no problems with you, but
keep your hands to yourself.
"Multi-Year Impacts of Ecotourism on Whale Shark Visitation
at Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia," by R.L. Sanzogni, M. G.
Meekan and J.J. Meeuwig; PLOS One, September 23, 2015; DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0127345