The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species

The conservation of wildlife is one of the most pressing issues in the current times, but wildlife conservation economic values have often been largely ignored due to an absence of market prices, as setting an economic value on biodiversity or whole ecosystems can be challenging. Nevertheless, valui...

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Main Authors: Ouled-Cheikh, Jazel, Giménez, Joan, Verborgh, Philippe, Jiménez-Torres, Carolina, Gauffier, Pauline, Esteban, Ruth, de Stephanis, Renaud
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975
https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.05323.077
id ftjscientiamarin:oai:scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es:article/1975
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Scientia Marina (E-Journal)
op_collection_id ftjscientiamarin
language English
topic common dolphin
killer whale
long-finned pilot whale
Mediterranean
whale-watching
wildlife economic valuation
delfín común
orca
calderón común
Mediterráneo
avistamiento de cetáceos
valoración económica de la vida salvaje
spellingShingle common dolphin
killer whale
long-finned pilot whale
Mediterranean
whale-watching
wildlife economic valuation
delfín común
orca
calderón común
Mediterráneo
avistamiento de cetáceos
valoración económica de la vida salvaje
Ouled-Cheikh, Jazel
Giménez, Joan
Verborgh, Philippe
Jiménez-Torres, Carolina
Gauffier, Pauline
Esteban, Ruth
de Stephanis, Renaud
The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species
topic_facet common dolphin
killer whale
long-finned pilot whale
Mediterranean
whale-watching
wildlife economic valuation
delfín común
orca
calderón común
Mediterráneo
avistamiento de cetáceos
valoración económica de la vida salvaje
description The conservation of wildlife is one of the most pressing issues in the current times, but wildlife conservation economic values have often been largely ignored due to an absence of market prices, as setting an economic value on biodiversity or whole ecosystems can be challenging. Nevertheless, valuing wildlife can be of great significance to improve decision-making in the conservation field, as it can provide a complementary perspective based on economic principles. Whale-watching provides an opportunity for the economic valuation of wildlife. Specifically, it offers a framework in which the economic revenue allows the economic valuation of the targeted cetaceans to be estimated through the direct and indirect expenditure of the tourists who purchase whale-watching tours. Here, we performed an economic analysis based on population abundances of the three main species targeted by the whale-watching companies in the Strait of Gibraltar (Spain): long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas), common dolphins (Delphinus delphis) and killer whales (Orcinus orca). These species generated a total annual income of €4,089,056, €1,876,833, and €505,389, respectively, and each individual would generate an average of €14,048, €951, and €36,099 each year, respectively. Incorporating life expectancy, this corresponded to a total population value of €112,426,185, €16,685,147, and €19,171,107, respectively, over their lifetime. These values provide an idea of the potential contribution of cetaceans to the local economy but only represent their non-consumptive value based on tourism. Our results reinforce the idea that a sustainable, high-quality whale-watching culture, under ACCOBAMS High-Quality Whale-Watching requirements, should be promoted to ensure a sustainable industry, stable economic income and the viability of cetacean populations in the Strait of Gibraltar. La conservación de la vida salvaje es uno de los retos clave del mundo actual. Sin embargo, los valores económicos derivados de la conservación de la vida ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ouled-Cheikh, Jazel
Giménez, Joan
Verborgh, Philippe
Jiménez-Torres, Carolina
Gauffier, Pauline
Esteban, Ruth
de Stephanis, Renaud
author_facet Ouled-Cheikh, Jazel
Giménez, Joan
Verborgh, Philippe
Jiménez-Torres, Carolina
Gauffier, Pauline
Esteban, Ruth
de Stephanis, Renaud
author_sort Ouled-Cheikh, Jazel
title The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species
title_short The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species
title_full The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species
title_fullStr The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species
title_full_unstemmed The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species
title_sort non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species
publisher Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
publishDate 2023
url https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975
https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.05323.077
long_lat ENVELOPE(-57.967,-57.967,-63.300,-63.300)
ENVELOPE(-60.783,-60.783,-62.450,-62.450)
geographic Calderón
Delfín
geographic_facet Calderón
Delfín
genre Killer Whale
Orca
Orcinus orca
Killer whale
genre_facet Killer Whale
Orca
Orcinus orca
Killer whale
op_source Scientia Marina; Vol. 87 No. 4 (2023); e077
Scientia Marina; Vol. 87 Núm. 4 (2023); e077
1886-8134
0214-8358
10.3989/scimar.2023.87n4
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https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975/2996
https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975/2997
Álava J.J., Barragán M.J., Denkinger J. 2012. Assessing the impact of bycatch on Ecuadorian humpback whale breeding stock: A review with management recommendations. Ocean Coast. Manag. 57: 34-43.
Barnes J. I., Schier C., Van Rooy G. 1999. Tourists’ willingness to pay for wildlife viewing and wildlife conservation in Namibia. S. Afr. J. Wildl. Res. 29: 101-111.
Bearzi G. 2012. Delphinus delphis (Mediterranean assessment). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2012:e.T134817215A195829089.
Bearzi G., Agazzi S., Gonzalvo J., et al. 2008. Overfishing and the disappearance of short-beaked common dolphins from western Greece. Endanger. Species Res. 5: 1-12.
Beaumont N.J., Austen M.C., Mangi S.C., Townsend M. 2008. Economic valuation for the conservation of marine biodiversity. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 56: 386-396.
Bejder L., Samuels A., Whitehead H., Gales N. 2006. Interpreting short-term behavioural responses to disturbance within a longitudinal perspective. Anim. Behav. 72: 1149-1158.
Bentz J., Lopes F., Calado H., Dearden P. 2016. Enhancing satisfaction and sustainable management: Whale-watching in the Azores. Tour. Manag. 54: 465-476.
Bruno M., Alonso J. J., Cózar A., et al. 2002. The boiling-water phenomena at Camarinal Sill, the Strait of Gibraltar. Deep-Sea Res. II: Top. Stud. Oceanogr. 49: 4097-4113.
Burns G.L., Howard P. 2003. When wildlife tourism goes wrong: a case study of stakeholder and management issues regarding Dingoes on Fraser Island, Australia. Tour. Manag. 24: 699-712.
Campbell L.M., Smith C. 2006. What makes them pay? values of volunteer tourists working for sea turtle conservation. Environ. Manage. 38: 84-98.
Carbó-Penche M., Salazar-Sierra J.M., de Stephanis R., Esteban R. 2007. Socio-economic analysis of the whale-watching industry in Andalucia, Spain. In Proceedings of the 21st Annual Meeting of the European Cetacean Society. San Sebastian, April (Vol. 22).
Carrera M., Favaro E., Souto A. 2008. The response of marine tucuxis (Sotalia fluviatilis) towards tourist boats involves avoidance behaviour and a reduction in foraging. Anim. Welf. 17: 117.
Chao A., Lee S., Jeng S. 1992. Estimating population size for capture-recapture data when capture probabilities vary by time and individual animal. Biometrics 48: 201-216.
Chapagain B.P., Poudyal N.C., Watkins C. 2020. A travel cost analysis of elk-viewing opportunity generated from an elk reintroduction project in Tennessee. Hum. Dimens. Wildl. 27: 84-91.
Charnov E.L. 1993. Life history invariants: Some explorations of symmetry in evolutionary ecology. Oxford University Press, New York, NY.
Corkeron P.J. 1995. Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in Hervey Bay, Queensland: behaviour and responses to whale-watching vessels. Can. J. Zool. 73: 1290-1299.
Corkeron P.J. 2004. Whale-watching, iconography, and marine conservation. Conserv. Biol. 18: 847-849.
David-Negre T., Hernández J.M., Moreno-Gil S. 2018. Understanding tourists’ leisure expenditure at the destination: a social network analysis. J. Travel Tour. Mark. 35: 922-937.
de Groot R.S., Fisher B., Christie M., et al. 2010. Integrating the ecological and economic dimensions in biodiversity and ecosystem service valuation. In: The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB): Ecological and Economic Foundations, pp. 9-40. Earthscan, Routledge, London.
de Stephanis R., Cornulier T., Verborgh P., et al. 2008a. Summer spatial distribution of cetaceans in the Strait of Gibraltar in relation to the oceanographic context. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 353: 275-288.
de Stephanis R., García-Tíscar S., Verborgh P., et al. 2008b. Diet of the social groups of long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas) in the Strait of Gibraltar. Mar. Biol., 154: 603-612.
Dicken M.L. 2010. Socio-economic aspects of boat-based ecotourism during the sardine run within the Pondoland Marine Protected Area, South Africa. Afr. J. Mar. Sci. 32: 405-411.
Echevarría F., Lafuente J.G., Bruno M., et al. 2002. Physical-biological coupling in the Strait of Gibraltar. Deep-Sea Res. II: Top. Stud. Oceanogr. 49: 4115-4130.
Elejabeitia C., Urquiola E., Verborgh P., de Stephanis R. 2012. Towards a sustainable whale-watching industry in the mediterranean sea. In: Rosalino L. M., Silva A., Abreu A., (eds), New trends towards Mediterranean tourism sustainability. Nova Science Publishers. ISBN: 978-1-62257-627-2.
Esteban R., Verborgh P., Gauffier P., et al. 2013. Identifying key habitat and seasonal patterns of a critically endangered population of killer whales. J. Mar. Biol. Assoc. 94: 1317-1325.
Esteban R., Verborgh P., Gauffier P., et al. 2016a. Using a multi-disciplinary approach to identify a critically endangered killer whale management unit. Ecol. Indic. 66: 291-300.
Esteban R., Verborgh P., Gauffier P., et al. 2016b. Dynamics of killer whale, bluefin tuna and human fisheries in the Strait of Gibraltar. Biol.Conserv. 194: 31-38.
Esteban R., Foote A. 2019. Orcinus orca (Strait of Gibraltar subpopulation). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019: e.T132948040A132949669.
Foote A.D., Osborne R.W., Hoelzel A R. 2004. Whale-call response to masking boat noise. Nature 428: 910-910.
Forestell P.H., Kaufman G. 1996. Whale-watching in Hawaii as a model for development of the industry worldwide. In: Colgan, K., Prasser, S., Jeffery A. (eds), Encounters with whales. Canberra: Australian Nature Conservation Agency.
Gallagher A.J., Hammerschlag N. 2011. Global shark currency: the distribution, frequency, and economic value of shark ecotourism. Curr. Issues Tour. 14: 797-812.
García de Pedraza L., Garcia Vega C. 1991. Características de los vientos en la zona del Estrecho de Gibraltar. Calendario meteorológico 1991. Publicaciones del Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia, Madrid, pp. 188 201.
Gauffier P., Verborgh P., Giménez J., et al. 2018. Contemporary migration of fin whales through the Strait of Gibraltar. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 588: 215-228.
Genov T., Bearzi G., Bonizzoni S., Tempesta M. 2012. Long-distance movement of a lone short-beaked common dolphin Delphinus delphis in the central Mediterranean Sea. Mar. Biodivers. Rec. 5: E9.
Giménez J., Gauffier P., Verborgh P., et al. 2011. The Bay of Algeciras: a feeding and breeding ground for common dolphins. In Abstract Book 25th Conference of European Cetacean Society, Cádiz, Spain.
Guinet C., Domenici P., de Stephanis R., et al. 2007. Killer whale predation on bluefin tuna: exploring the hypothesis of the endurance-exhaustion technique. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 347: 111-119.
Hoyt E., Parsons E. C. M. 2014. The whale-watching industry. Whale-watching: Sustainable tourism and ecological management, pp. 57-70.
Jakobsson K.M., Dragun A.K. 2001. The worth of a possum: valuing species with the contingent valuation method. Environ Resour Econ. 19: 211-227.
IUCN Marine Mammal Protected Areas Task Force. 2017. Final Report of the Workshop: First IMMA Regional Workshop for the Mediterranean, Chania, Greece, 24-28 October 2016. 29 pp. Available at: https://www.marinemammalhabitat.org/download/final-report-regional-orkshop-mediterranean-sea-important-marine-mammal-areas/.
Just E.R., Hueth D.L., Schmitz A. 1982. Applied welfare economics and public policy. American J. Agric. Econ. 64: 797-798.
Kareiva P., Tallis H., Ricketts T. H., Daily G. C., Polasky S. 2011. Natural Capital: Theory and practice of mapping ecosystem services. Oxford University Press.
Kirkby C. A., Giudice R., Day B., et al. 2011. Closing the ecotourism-conservation loop in the Peruvian Amazon. Environ. Conserv. 477 38: 6-17.
Loomis J.B., White D.S. 1996. Economic benefits of rare and endangered species: summary and meta-analysis. Ecol. Econ. 18: 197-206.
Lusseau D., Bejder L. 2007. The long-term consequences of short-term responses to disturbance experiences from whale-watching impact assessment. Int. J. Comp. Psychol. 20: 228-236.
Mangubhai S., Sykes H., Manley M., Vukikomoala K., Beattie M. 2020. Contributions of tourism-based Marine Conservation Agreements to natural resource management in Fiji. Ecol. Econ. 171: 106607.
Mace G.M., Barrett M., Burgess N.D., et al. 2018. Aiming higher to bend the curve of biodiversity loss. Nat. Sustain. 1: 448-451.
Magalhães S., Prieto R., Silva M.A., et al. 2002. Short-term reactions of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) to whale-watching vessels in the Azores. Aquat. Mamm. 28: 267-274.
op_rights Copyright (c) 2023 Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.05323.07710.3989/scimar.2023.87n4
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spelling ftjscientiamarin:oai:scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es:article/1975 2024-01-21T10:07:49+01:00 The non-consumptive economic value of wildlife: the case of three cetacean species El valor económico no consumitivo de la vida salvaje: el caso de tres especies de cetáceos Ouled-Cheikh, Jazel Giménez, Joan Verborgh, Philippe Jiménez-Torres, Carolina Gauffier, Pauline Esteban, Ruth de Stephanis, Renaud 2023-12-20 text/html application/pdf text/xml https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975 https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.05323.077 eng eng Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975/2995 https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975/2996 https://scientiamarina.revistas.csic.es/index.php/scientiamarina/article/view/1975/2997 Álava J.J., Barragán M.J., Denkinger J. 2012. Assessing the impact of bycatch on Ecuadorian humpback whale breeding stock: A review with management recommendations. Ocean Coast. Manag. 57: 34-43. Barnes J. I., Schier C., Van Rooy G. 1999. Tourists’ willingness to pay for wildlife viewing and wildlife conservation in Namibia. S. Afr. J. Wildl. Res. 29: 101-111. Bearzi G. 2012. Delphinus delphis (Mediterranean assessment). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2012:e.T134817215A195829089. Bearzi G., Agazzi S., Gonzalvo J., et al. 2008. Overfishing and the disappearance of short-beaked common dolphins from western Greece. Endanger. Species Res. 5: 1-12. Beaumont N.J., Austen M.C., Mangi S.C., Townsend M. 2008. Economic valuation for the conservation of marine biodiversity. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 56: 386-396. Bejder L., Samuels A., Whitehead H., Gales N. 2006. Interpreting short-term behavioural responses to disturbance within a longitudinal perspective. Anim. Behav. 72: 1149-1158. Bentz J., Lopes F., Calado H., Dearden P. 2016. Enhancing satisfaction and sustainable management: Whale-watching in the Azores. Tour. Manag. 54: 465-476. Bruno M., Alonso J. J., Cózar A., et al. 2002. The boiling-water phenomena at Camarinal Sill, the Strait of Gibraltar. Deep-Sea Res. II: Top. Stud. Oceanogr. 49: 4097-4113. Burns G.L., Howard P. 2003. When wildlife tourism goes wrong: a case study of stakeholder and management issues regarding Dingoes on Fraser Island, Australia. Tour. Manag. 24: 699-712. Campbell L.M., Smith C. 2006. What makes them pay? values of volunteer tourists working for sea turtle conservation. Environ. Manage. 38: 84-98. Carbó-Penche M., Salazar-Sierra J.M., de Stephanis R., Esteban R. 2007. Socio-economic analysis of the whale-watching industry in Andalucia, Spain. In Proceedings of the 21st Annual Meeting of the European Cetacean Society. San Sebastian, April (Vol. 22). Carrera M., Favaro E., Souto A. 2008. The response of marine tucuxis (Sotalia fluviatilis) towards tourist boats involves avoidance behaviour and a reduction in foraging. Anim. Welf. 17: 117. Chao A., Lee S., Jeng S. 1992. Estimating population size for capture-recapture data when capture probabilities vary by time and individual animal. Biometrics 48: 201-216. Chapagain B.P., Poudyal N.C., Watkins C. 2020. A travel cost analysis of elk-viewing opportunity generated from an elk reintroduction project in Tennessee. Hum. Dimens. Wildl. 27: 84-91. Charnov E.L. 1993. Life history invariants: Some explorations of symmetry in evolutionary ecology. Oxford University Press, New York, NY. Corkeron P.J. 1995. Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in Hervey Bay, Queensland: behaviour and responses to whale-watching vessels. Can. J. Zool. 73: 1290-1299. Corkeron P.J. 2004. Whale-watching, iconography, and marine conservation. Conserv. Biol. 18: 847-849. David-Negre T., Hernández J.M., Moreno-Gil S. 2018. Understanding tourists’ leisure expenditure at the destination: a social network analysis. J. Travel Tour. Mark. 35: 922-937. de Groot R.S., Fisher B., Christie M., et al. 2010. Integrating the ecological and economic dimensions in biodiversity and ecosystem service valuation. In: The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB): Ecological and Economic Foundations, pp. 9-40. Earthscan, Routledge, London. de Stephanis R., Cornulier T., Verborgh P., et al. 2008a. Summer spatial distribution of cetaceans in the Strait of Gibraltar in relation to the oceanographic context. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 353: 275-288. de Stephanis R., García-Tíscar S., Verborgh P., et al. 2008b. Diet of the social groups of long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas) in the Strait of Gibraltar. Mar. Biol., 154: 603-612. Dicken M.L. 2010. Socio-economic aspects of boat-based ecotourism during the sardine run within the Pondoland Marine Protected Area, South Africa. Afr. J. Mar. Sci. 32: 405-411. Echevarría F., Lafuente J.G., Bruno M., et al. 2002. Physical-biological coupling in the Strait of Gibraltar. Deep-Sea Res. II: Top. Stud. Oceanogr. 49: 4115-4130. Elejabeitia C., Urquiola E., Verborgh P., de Stephanis R. 2012. Towards a sustainable whale-watching industry in the mediterranean sea. In: Rosalino L. M., Silva A., Abreu A., (eds), New trends towards Mediterranean tourism sustainability. Nova Science Publishers. ISBN: 978-1-62257-627-2. Esteban R., Verborgh P., Gauffier P., et al. 2013. Identifying key habitat and seasonal patterns of a critically endangered population of killer whales. J. Mar. Biol. Assoc. 94: 1317-1325. Esteban R., Verborgh P., Gauffier P., et al. 2016a. Using a multi-disciplinary approach to identify a critically endangered killer whale management unit. Ecol. Indic. 66: 291-300. Esteban R., Verborgh P., Gauffier P., et al. 2016b. Dynamics of killer whale, bluefin tuna and human fisheries in the Strait of Gibraltar. Biol.Conserv. 194: 31-38. Esteban R., Foote A. 2019. Orcinus orca (Strait of Gibraltar subpopulation). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019: e.T132948040A132949669. Foote A.D., Osborne R.W., Hoelzel A R. 2004. Whale-call response to masking boat noise. Nature 428: 910-910. Forestell P.H., Kaufman G. 1996. Whale-watching in Hawaii as a model for development of the industry worldwide. In: Colgan, K., Prasser, S., Jeffery A. (eds), Encounters with whales. Canberra: Australian Nature Conservation Agency. Gallagher A.J., Hammerschlag N. 2011. Global shark currency: the distribution, frequency, and economic value of shark ecotourism. Curr. Issues Tour. 14: 797-812. García de Pedraza L., Garcia Vega C. 1991. Características de los vientos en la zona del Estrecho de Gibraltar. Calendario meteorológico 1991. Publicaciones del Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia, Madrid, pp. 188 201. Gauffier P., Verborgh P., Giménez J., et al. 2018. Contemporary migration of fin whales through the Strait of Gibraltar. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 588: 215-228. Genov T., Bearzi G., Bonizzoni S., Tempesta M. 2012. Long-distance movement of a lone short-beaked common dolphin Delphinus delphis in the central Mediterranean Sea. Mar. Biodivers. Rec. 5: E9. Giménez J., Gauffier P., Verborgh P., et al. 2011. The Bay of Algeciras: a feeding and breeding ground for common dolphins. In Abstract Book 25th Conference of European Cetacean Society, Cádiz, Spain. Guinet C., Domenici P., de Stephanis R., et al. 2007. Killer whale predation on bluefin tuna: exploring the hypothesis of the endurance-exhaustion technique. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 347: 111-119. Hoyt E., Parsons E. C. M. 2014. The whale-watching industry. Whale-watching: Sustainable tourism and ecological management, pp. 57-70. Jakobsson K.M., Dragun A.K. 2001. The worth of a possum: valuing species with the contingent valuation method. Environ Resour Econ. 19: 211-227. IUCN Marine Mammal Protected Areas Task Force. 2017. Final Report of the Workshop: First IMMA Regional Workshop for the Mediterranean, Chania, Greece, 24-28 October 2016. 29 pp. Available at: https://www.marinemammalhabitat.org/download/final-report-regional-orkshop-mediterranean-sea-important-marine-mammal-areas/. Just E.R., Hueth D.L., Schmitz A. 1982. Applied welfare economics and public policy. American J. Agric. Econ. 64: 797-798. Kareiva P., Tallis H., Ricketts T. H., Daily G. C., Polasky S. 2011. Natural Capital: Theory and practice of mapping ecosystem services. Oxford University Press. Kirkby C. A., Giudice R., Day B., et al. 2011. Closing the ecotourism-conservation loop in the Peruvian Amazon. Environ. Conserv. 477 38: 6-17. Loomis J.B., White D.S. 1996. Economic benefits of rare and endangered species: summary and meta-analysis. Ecol. Econ. 18: 197-206. Lusseau D., Bejder L. 2007. The long-term consequences of short-term responses to disturbance experiences from whale-watching impact assessment. Int. J. Comp. Psychol. 20: 228-236. Mangubhai S., Sykes H., Manley M., Vukikomoala K., Beattie M. 2020. Contributions of tourism-based Marine Conservation Agreements to natural resource management in Fiji. Ecol. Econ. 171: 106607. Mace G.M., Barrett M., Burgess N.D., et al. 2018. Aiming higher to bend the curve of biodiversity loss. Nat. Sustain. 1: 448-451. Magalhães S., Prieto R., Silva M.A., et al. 2002. Short-term reactions of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) to whale-watching vessels in the Azores. Aquat. Mamm. 28: 267-274. Copyright (c) 2023 Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 Scientia Marina; Vol. 87 No. 4 (2023); e077 Scientia Marina; Vol. 87 Núm. 4 (2023); e077 1886-8134 0214-8358 10.3989/scimar.2023.87n4 common dolphin killer whale long-finned pilot whale Mediterranean whale-watching wildlife economic valuation delfín común orca calderón común Mediterráneo avistamiento de cetáceos valoración económica de la vida salvaje info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed article Artículo revisado por pares 2023 ftjscientiamarin https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.05323.07710.3989/scimar.2023.87n4 2023-12-27T00:43:57Z The conservation of wildlife is one of the most pressing issues in the current times, but wildlife conservation economic values have often been largely ignored due to an absence of market prices, as setting an economic value on biodiversity or whole ecosystems can be challenging. Nevertheless, valuing wildlife can be of great significance to improve decision-making in the conservation field, as it can provide a complementary perspective based on economic principles. Whale-watching provides an opportunity for the economic valuation of wildlife. Specifically, it offers a framework in which the economic revenue allows the economic valuation of the targeted cetaceans to be estimated through the direct and indirect expenditure of the tourists who purchase whale-watching tours. Here, we performed an economic analysis based on population abundances of the three main species targeted by the whale-watching companies in the Strait of Gibraltar (Spain): long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas), common dolphins (Delphinus delphis) and killer whales (Orcinus orca). These species generated a total annual income of €4,089,056, €1,876,833, and €505,389, respectively, and each individual would generate an average of €14,048, €951, and €36,099 each year, respectively. Incorporating life expectancy, this corresponded to a total population value of €112,426,185, €16,685,147, and €19,171,107, respectively, over their lifetime. These values provide an idea of the potential contribution of cetaceans to the local economy but only represent their non-consumptive value based on tourism. Our results reinforce the idea that a sustainable, high-quality whale-watching culture, under ACCOBAMS High-Quality Whale-Watching requirements, should be promoted to ensure a sustainable industry, stable economic income and the viability of cetacean populations in the Strait of Gibraltar. La conservación de la vida salvaje es uno de los retos clave del mundo actual. Sin embargo, los valores económicos derivados de la conservación de la vida ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Killer Whale Orca Orcinus orca Killer whale Scientia Marina (E-Journal) Calderón ENVELOPE(-57.967,-57.967,-63.300,-63.300) Delfín ENVELOPE(-60.783,-60.783,-62.450,-62.450)