TY - BOOK AU - Bessa,Eduardo AU - Blumstein,Daniel T. AU - Geffroy,Benjamin AU - Samia,Diogo S.M. TI - Ecotourism's Promise and Peril: A Biological Evaluation SN - 9783319583310 U1 - 570 23 PY - 2017/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Springer KW - Animal welfare KW - Behavioral sciences KW - Environmental economics KW - Life sciences KW - Management KW - Tourism KW - Zoology KW - Popular Life Sciences KW - Animal Welfare/Animal Ethics KW - Behavioral Sciences KW - Environmental Economics KW - Tourism Management N1 - Introduction: Ecotourism's Promise and Peril -- Physiological and Behavioral Consequences of Human Visitation -- Ecological Consequences of Ecotourism for Wildlife Populations and Communities -- Transgenerational Consequences of Human Visitation -- Impacts of Fish Tourism -- Impacts of Marine Mammal Tourism -- Impacts of Terrestrial Animal Tourism -- Impacts of Penguin Tourism -- How Ecotourism Affects Human Communities -- Best Practices Towards Sustainable Ecotourism -- Creating a Research-based Agenda to Reduce Ecotourism Impacts on Wildlife N2 - Intended as a guide for wildlife managers and ecotourism operators, as well as interested ecotourists, this book addresses the biological principles governing how ecotourism affects wildlife. The introductory chapters focus on four key responses to human visitation-behavioral, physiological, ecological, and evolutionary. Readers will discover ecotourism's effects on biodiversity in connection with various industries that are habitat or taxonomically specific: fish tourism (including both freshwater and marine), marine mammal tourism, the huge industry centered on terrestrial animals, and the well-studied industry of penguin tourism. Given that the costs and benefits of ecotourism cannot be meaningfully assessed without understanding the human context, particular attention is given to how ecotourism has been used as part of community development. In closing, the book synthesizes the current state of knowledge regarding best practices for reducing human impacts on wildlife. The final chapter highlights key research questions that must be addressed to provide more evidence-based guidelines and policy UR - https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CT6bvG1sfkrYOT8ESDKnwdKUFbxTBMAb/view?usp=sharing ER -