Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism

Tese de mestrado, Biologia (Biologia da Conservação), 2009, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências On a global scale, there has been a rapid growth of the whale watching industry in the last decade. In 1998, a total of 87 countries was involved in commercial cetacean tourist activities, with...

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Main Author: Soares, Sara
Other Authors: Bain, David, Magalhães, Filomena
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10451/1478
http://catalogo.ul.pt/F/?func=item-global&doc_library=ULB01&type=03&doc_number=000573182
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author Soares, Sara
author2 Bain, David,
Magalhães, Filomena
author_facet Soares, Sara
author_sort Soares, Sara
collection Technical University of Lisbon: UTL Repository
description Tese de mestrado, Biologia (Biologia da Conservação), 2009, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências On a global scale, there has been a rapid growth of the whale watching industry in the last decade. In 1998, a total of 87 countries was involved in commercial cetacean tourist activities, with more than nine million people participating (Hoyt 2001). Off San Juan Island, Washington, USA, southern resident killer whales (Orcinus orca) population is the key resource of the tourism industry. Due to its predictability and to the fact that it is readily found it became the main target of the industry, being watched nearly at a daily basis from May through September. A fleet of almost 80 vessels and over 500,000 people annually engage in whale watching in this region (Koski 2008). Recently, the southern resident population of killer whales experienced an almost 20% decline (Krahn et al. 2002), resulting in their listing as 'depleted' under the US Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and 'endangered' under the US Endangered Species Act (ESA) and the Canadian Species at Risk Act (SARA). This combination of intense tourism activity and a fragile population has unsurprisingly brought apprehensiveness and several attempts to assess the effects of tourism activities on marine mammals have been made. Recent studies have shown that vessel presence can have short-term behavioral impacts which may result in longterm impacts. This study examined vessels' density when whales are present in the west coast of San Juan Island, and the performance of surface active behaviors (SABs) by southern resident killer whales. The results show that over 70% of the vessels involved in this activity are at least at ½ mile from shore, when whales are travelling very close to shore. The performance of SABs was greater with fewer boats present. These results allowed the assessment of further measures to regulate vessels' traffic in this region. Resumo alargado em português disponível no documento
format Master Thesis
genre Orca
Orcinus orca
genre_facet Orca
Orcinus orca
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Koski
geographic_facet San Juan
Koski
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spelling ftunivtecnical:oai:repositorio.ulisboa.pt:10451/1478 2025-04-13T14:25:18+00:00 Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism Soares, Sara Bain, David, Magalhães, Filomena 2009 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10451/1478 http://catalogo.ul.pt/F/?func=item-global&doc_library=ULB01&type=03&doc_number=000573182 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/10451/1478 openAccess Mamíferos aquáticos Cetáceos Baleias Ecoturismo Teses de mestrado masterThesis 2009 ftunivtecnical 2025-03-19T10:08:19Z Tese de mestrado, Biologia (Biologia da Conservação), 2009, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências On a global scale, there has been a rapid growth of the whale watching industry in the last decade. In 1998, a total of 87 countries was involved in commercial cetacean tourist activities, with more than nine million people participating (Hoyt 2001). Off San Juan Island, Washington, USA, southern resident killer whales (Orcinus orca) population is the key resource of the tourism industry. Due to its predictability and to the fact that it is readily found it became the main target of the industry, being watched nearly at a daily basis from May through September. A fleet of almost 80 vessels and over 500,000 people annually engage in whale watching in this region (Koski 2008). Recently, the southern resident population of killer whales experienced an almost 20% decline (Krahn et al. 2002), resulting in their listing as 'depleted' under the US Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and 'endangered' under the US Endangered Species Act (ESA) and the Canadian Species at Risk Act (SARA). This combination of intense tourism activity and a fragile population has unsurprisingly brought apprehensiveness and several attempts to assess the effects of tourism activities on marine mammals have been made. Recent studies have shown that vessel presence can have short-term behavioral impacts which may result in longterm impacts. This study examined vessels' density when whales are present in the west coast of San Juan Island, and the performance of surface active behaviors (SABs) by southern resident killer whales. The results show that over 70% of the vessels involved in this activity are at least at ½ mile from shore, when whales are travelling very close to shore. The performance of SABs was greater with fewer boats present. These results allowed the assessment of further measures to regulate vessels' traffic in this region. Resumo alargado em português disponível no documento Master Thesis Orca Orcinus orca Technical University of Lisbon: UTL Repository San Juan Koski ENVELOPE(29.809,29.809,65.894,65.894)
spellingShingle Mamíferos aquáticos
Cetáceos
Baleias
Ecoturismo
Teses de mestrado
Soares, Sara
Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism
title Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism
title_full Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism
title_fullStr Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism
title_full_unstemmed Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism
title_short Southern resident killer whales and ecotourism
title_sort southern resident killer whales and ecotourism
topic Mamíferos aquáticos
Cetáceos
Baleias
Ecoturismo
Teses de mestrado
topic_facet Mamíferos aquáticos
Cetáceos
Baleias
Ecoturismo
Teses de mestrado
url http://hdl.handle.net/10451/1478
http://catalogo.ul.pt/F/?func=item-global&doc_library=ULB01&type=03&doc_number=000573182