Date: June 7, 2018
Source: Oxford University Press USA
A new study in Conservation
Physiology, published by Oxford University Press, reveals that white shark
activity increases dramatically when the animals are interacting with
cage-diving operators.
In recent decades, wildlife
tourism has rapidly expanded and is one of the fastest growing sectors of the
tourism industry. Ecotourism opportunities to cage-dive with white sharks,
large marine predators, are available in Australia, South Africa, the United
States of America, Mexico, and New Zealand, with up to seven companies
operating simultaneously in one site.
Previous studies have shown that
wildlife tourism can change behavior of animal species by altering their
habitats or eating patterns. How these changes affect the health of individual
animals or animal populations is unclear.
The study shows that white sharks
are more active and likely use more energy when interacting with tourism
operators compared to other situations (e.g. when operators are absent),
raising questions about the behavioral changes such tourism may be causing.
The researchers tracked ten white
sharks at South Australia's Neptune Islands with devices for nine days, finding
that the increased movement when sharks are interacting with cage-diving
operators results in overall dynamic body acceleration, a proxy for activity,
61% higher compared to other times when sharks are present in the area.
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