社会物种的社交媒体:南亚得里亚海黑山旅游业中宽吻海豚(Tursiops truncatus)行为转变的案例研究

John Clarkson, L. Abbiss, Aylin Akkaya Baş
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引用次数: 1

摘要

旅游船只和鲸类之间的互动正在增加。生态旅游、观鲸之旅或该行业日益增长的经济实力都促成了目前的局面。最近的旅游研究为目标鲸类种群的短期和长期变化提供了案例。短期变化是指由于海洋船只运动而引起的行为反应,其中观察到发声变化和水平和垂直潜水间隔的增加。研究了宽吻海豚在没有和有旅游船只的情况下的行为转变,我们模拟了控制和影响链的影响,为社交媒体的使用提供了一个案例,以增加其他研究领域的科学数据收集。在旅游业存在的情况下,增加的潜水行为可能与增加的船只回避有关,而增加的群体凝聚力行为可能被误认为是更紧密的群体形成,在靠近船只的情况下,铣磨和休息行为。在两周的时间里,使用标签跟踪网站进行社交媒体搜索,获得科学数据可用帖子的成功率为26.5%。虽然不可能将行为转变的短期变化与行为预算的长期变化联系起来,但很明显,旅游可以引起强烈的行为反应。鉴于指导方针和缓解战略往往会被忽视或需要数年时间才能实施,我们建议利用旅游习惯来造福我们。最终,这种公民科学的新方式将有助于实施适当的保护策略,从而对在鲸类热点地区的海上船只交通制定更严格的规定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Media for Social Species: A case study on the behavioural transitions of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in the presence of tourism, Montenegro, South Adriatic
Interactions between touristic vessels and cetaceans are increasing. Ecotourism, whale watching tours or the increasing economic power of the industry have all contributed to the current situation. Recent tourism studies have made cases for both short and long-term changes for targeted cetacean populations. Short-term changes refer to behavioural responses as a result of marine vessel movements where vocalisation variation and increased horizontal and vertical dive intervals have been observed. Investigating behavioural transitions of bottlenose dolphins in the absence and presence of tourism vessels, we modelled the impacts in control and impact chains, making a case for social media use to increase scientific data collection in other areas of research. In the presence of tourism, increased diving behaviours could relate to increased vessel avoidance whilst increased group cohesive behaviours may be mistaken for tighter group formations in the case of milling and resting behaviours within closer proximity to vessels. Social media searches within a two-week period using a hashtag tracking website yielded a 26.5% success rate of usable posts for scientific data. Although it is not possible to relate short-term changes in behavioural transitions to long-term changes in behavioural budget, it is evident tourism can elicit strong behavioural responses. In the knowledge that guidelines and mitigation strategies can often be ignored or take years to be implemented, we suggest using touristic habits to our benefit. Ultimately this novel way of citizen science would contribute to implementing appropriate conservation strategies, resulting in stricter regulations regarding marine vessel traffic in cetacean hotspots.
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