Title of article :
Tourism and wildlife habituation: Reduced population fitness or cessation of impact?
Author/Authors :
Higham، نويسنده , , J.E.S. and Shelton، نويسنده , , E.J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
9
From page :
1290
To page :
1298
Abstract :
Habituation typically is viewed as a negative consequence of human interactions with wildlife (Higginbottom, 2004; Newsome, Dowling, & Moore, 2005; Shackley, 1996). While animal habituation commonly is used in the laboratory and field-based zoology studies, attempts to consider deliberate habituation specifically in a tourism management context (Shelton, Higham, & Seddon, 2004) has been received unsympathetically by biological scientists and wildlife managers on the grounds that habituation, by definition, is undesirable. This paper puts forward the case that the global and stable behavioural descriptor, habituation, is not the most useful way to formulate most observed lack-of-wildlife-response to visitor approach and observation. It presents an applied behaviour analysis of wildlife habituation that is situated within learning theory. This analysis differentiates between avoidance/approach behaviours, tolerance, habituation and sensitisation. This provides a formulative framework for human–wildlife interactions, that is then considered specifically in terms of tourism businesses seeking to provide sustainable visitor interactions with wild animals. A tourism management model derived from this critique of habituation is presented and discussed.
Keywords :
TOLERANCE , Wildlife , Sensitisation , Tourism , MANAGEMENT , habituation , Stimulus control
Journal title :
Tourism Management
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Tourism Management
Record number :
2331025
Link To Document :
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