Tourism in protected areas can threaten wild populations: from individual response to population viability of the chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax
Authored by Christian Kerbiriou, Francoise Gourmelon, Alexandre Robert, Viol Isabelle Le, Emmanuelle Porcher, Romain Julliard
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2009.01646.x
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Abstract
Many protected areas are now faced with increasing pressure from
visitors and tourism development. There is thus an urgent need for
conservation biologists to evaluate the full impact of human disturbance
not only on individual responses, but also on the viability of protected
populations, so that relevant management measures can be proposed.
We studied the impact of tourism on the rare and endangered chough
Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax on a protected French island to assess the
relationship between visitor pressure, bird individual behaviour and
fitness, and population viability. During 8 years, we monitored foraging
behaviour and estimated monthly juvenile survival using mark-recapture
data. Population viability was examined under different tourism
scenarios, using a stochastic individual-based model that incorporated
the impact of visitor numbers on juvenile survival.
In summer, the foraging probability of choughs was negatively correlated
with the number of visitors. As a result, the time allocated to foraging
during peak tourist season, adjusted to day length and prey
availability, was 50\% lower than expected.
Juvenile survival rates were lowest in August, the peak tourist season, and varied significantly across years. August survival rate and
therefore annual survival were negatively correlated with the number of
visitors on the island in August and, except for a minor negative effect
of rainfall, were not influenced by other environmental variables.
Stochastic simulations predicted a low probability of extinction of the
protected population if the number of visitors remains constant in the
future. However, short-term viability would be dramatically reduced if
the current rate of increase in visitor numbers is maintained.
Synthesis and applications. We show that a relatively minor
human-induced disturbance (e.g. scaring individuals away) has dramatic
effects on population viability in a protected area, even when breeding
individuals are not directly affected. This suggests that the full
impact of tourism in protected areas may be overlooked, and has direct
consequences for the assessment of sustainable levels of human
disturbance and the design of quantitative management options compatible
with tourist activities in protected areas. We specifically emphasize
the need for more integrative approaches combining research at
individual and population levels.
Tags
Management
Dynamics
Conservation
Human disturbance
Biosphere Reserve
Impact
Consequences
Behavioral-responses
Animals
Survival