Araştırma Makalesi
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Whale Watching as a Type of Ecotourism and a Research on Its Potential in Türkiye

Yıl 2024, Cilt: 8 Sayı: 1, 50 - 60, 30.06.2024
https://doi.org/10.30625/ijctr.1401848

Öz

According to the International Whaling Commision (IWC), whale watching, which is defined as “commercial activity aimed at observing whales in their natural habitat” and is valid for all whale and dolphin species, emerged in America in the early 1950s, but gained momentum after the 1980s and spread to many parts of the world, and has established itself as a billion-dollar industry globally. After the anti-whaling movements that started in the 1970s resulted in the IWC initiating a whaling ban in 1986, whales became an important charismatic species for marine conservation efforts. When the potential of our country was examined in terms of this sector, which has had successful examples worldwide since the 1980s, it was predicted that the presence of eight whale and dolphin (Cetacea) species in different seas of our country could make a significant contribution to the local economy and marine conservation efforts. It is known that when applied correctly, it can contribute to many topics such as socio-economic, education and conservation, as well as providing a continuous data flow for cetacea species in our country with its studies on the axis of citizen science. In this study, the potential of commercial cetacean observation in our country, together with its positive and negative effects, was evaluated.

Kaynakça

  • Alan, V. (2015). İzmir Körfezinde yaşayan Cetacea türlerinin popülasyonları üzerine bir araştırma (Yüksek Lisans Tezi, Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü).
  • Akkaya, A., Lyne, P., Schulz, X., Awbery, T., Capitain, S., Rosell, B. F., ... ve Gordon, J. (2020). Preliminary results of cetacean sightings in the eastern Mediterranean Sea of Turkey. Journal of the Black Sea/Mediterranean Environment, 26(1), 26-47.
  • Allen, M. C., ve Read, A. J. (2000). Habitat selection of foraging bottlenose dolphins in relation to boat density near Clearwater, Florida. Marine Mammal Science, 16(4), 815-824.
  • Arcangeli, A., Crosti, R., del Leviatano, A., ve Rome, I. (2009). The short-term impact of dolphin-watching on the behaviour of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in western Australia. Journal of Marine Animals and their Ecology, 2(1), 3-9.
  • Arnold, H. (1997). The Dolphin Space Programme: The development and assessment of an accreditation scheme for dolphin watching boats in the Moray Firth (Report for the Scottish Wildlife Trust, Scottish Natural Heritage and the EU Life Programme).
  • Awbery, T., et al. (2021). Combining Data Sources to Understand the Fine-Scale Distribution and Encounter Rates of Common Dolphins Delphinus delphis in one of the busiest waterways in the world, the Istanbul Strait. In 2021 International Workshop on Metrology for the Sea; Learning to Measure Sea Health Parameters (MetroSea), Reggio Calabria, Italy, pp. 134-138. doi: 10.1109/MetroSea52177.2021.9611577.
  • Bass, J. (2000). Variations in gray whale feeding behavior in the presence of whale-watching vessels in Clayoquot Sound, 1993-1995 (Doctoral dissertation).
  • Baş, A. A., Öztürk, B., ve Öztürk, A. A. (2019). Encounter rate, residency pattern and site fidelity of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) within the Istanbul Strait, Turkey. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 99(4), 1009-1016.
  • Bejder, L., Samuels, A., Whitehead, H., & Gales, N. (2006). Interpreting short-term behavioural responses to disturbance within a longitudinal perspective. Animal Behaviour, 72(5), 1149–1158.
  • Bejder, L., Samuels, A., Whitehead, H., et al. (2006). Decline in relative abundance of bottlenose dolphins exposed to long-term disturbance. Conservation Biology, 20(6), 1791–1798.
  • Boran, J.R., Evans, P.G.H., ve Rosen, M.J. (2000). Cetaceans of the Hebrides: Seven years of surveys. European Research on Cetaceans, 13, 169–174.
  • Buckstaff, K. C. (2004). Effects of watercraft noise on the acoustic behavior of bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus, in Sarasota Bay, Florida. Marine Mammal Science, 20(4), 709–725.
  • Ceballos-Lascuráin, H. (1996). Tourism, ecotourism, and protected areas. https://doi.org/10.2305/iucn.ch.1996.7.en
  • Childerhouse, S. J., Dawson, S. M., ve Slooten, E. (1995). Abundance and seasonal residence of sperm whales at Kaikoura, New Zealand. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 73, 723–731.
  • Cisneros-Montemayor, A. M., Sumaila, U. R., Kaschner, K., & Pauly, D. (2010). The global potential for whale watching. Marine Policy, 34, 1273–1278. doi:10.1016/j.marpol.2010.05.005.
  • Constantine, R., Brunton, D. H., ve Dennis, T. (2004). Dolphin-watching tour boats change bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) behavior. Biological Conservation, 117(3), 299–307.
  • Dede, A., Tonay, M., & Gönülal, O. (2020). First sighting of false killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens) in the northern Aegean Sea. Journal of the Black Sea/Mediterranean Environment, 26(1), 106-111.
  • Deveciyan, K. (1926). Peche et pecheries en Turquie. Administration de la Dette Publique Ottomane. Donaldson, R., Finn, H., & Calver, M. (2010). Illegal feeding increases risk of boat-strike and entanglement in Bottlenose Dolphins in Perth, Western Australia. Pacific Conservation Biology, 16(3), 157–161.
  • Forestell, P. H. (1993). If Leviathan has a face, does Gaia have a soul? Incorporating environmental education in marine eco-tourism programs. Ocean and Coastal Management, 20, 267–282. Glossary of tourism terms | UNWTO. (2019). https://www.unwto.org/glossary-tourism-terms.
  • Hastie, G. D., Wilson, B., Tufft, L. H., ve Thompson, P. M. (2003). Bottlenose dolphins increase breathing synchrony in response to boat traffic. Marine Mammal Science, 19(1), 74–84.
  • Horn, C., Simmons, D. G., & Fairweather, J. R. (1998). Evolution and change in Kaikoura: Responses to tourism development. Tourism Recreation Research and Education Centre, Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand. 97 pp.
  • Hoyt, E. (1994). The increase of whale watching. European Cetacean Society Newsletter, 2, 8–9
  • Hoyt, E. (1995). The Worldwide Value and Extent of Whale Watching. Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, Bath.
  • Hoyt, E. (2001). Whale Watching 2001: Worldwide Tourism Numbers, Expenditures and Expanding Socioeconomic Benefits. Yarmouth Port, MA: International Fund for Animal Welfare.
  • IFAW, Tethys Research Institute, and Europe Conservation. (1995). Report of the Workshop on the Scientific Aspects of Managing Whale Watching. Montecastello di Vibio, Italy. 40 pp.
  • IFAW. (1996). Report of the Workshop on the Special Aspects of Watching Sperm Whales. Roseau, Commonwealth of Dominica. 36 pp.
  • IFAW, WWF, and WDCS. (1997). Report of the International Workshop on the Educational Values of Whale Watching. Provincetown, MA, USA. 40 pp.
  • IFAW. (1999). Report of the Workshop on the Socioeconomic Aspects of Whale Watching. Kaikoura, New Zealand. 88 pp.
  • International Whaling Commission. (1994). Chairman’s report of the forty-fifth annual meeting. Appendix 9. IWC resolution on whale watching. Reports of the International Whaling Commission, 44, 33–34.
  • International Whaling Commission. (2007). Report of the scientific committee. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 9(supplement), 1–73.
  • International Whaling Commission. (2009). Report of the scientific committee. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 11(supplement), 1–74.
  • Janik, V. M., ve Thompson, P. M. (1996). Changes in surfacing patterns of bottlenose dolphins in response to boat traffic. Marine Mammal Science, 12, 597–602.
  • Jaquet, N., Dawson, S., ve Slooten, E. (2000). Seasonal distribution and diving behaviour of male sperm whales off Kaikoura: Foraging implications. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 78, 407–419.
  • Jensen, F. H., Wahlberg, M., Bejder, L., ve Madsen, P. (2008). Noise levels and masking potential of small whale watching and research vessels around two delphinid species. Bioacoustics, 17, 166–168. Katona, S., ve Whitehead, H. (1988). Are cetacea ecologically important. Oceanogr Mar Biol Annu Rev, 26, 553-568.
  • Leaper, R. (2001). Summary of data on ship strikes of large cetaceans from progress reports (1996–2000). In Proceedings of the 53rd Meeting of the International Whaling Commission, London, UK, July 2001.
  • Luksenburg, J., ve Parsons, E. C. M. (2009). Effects of aircraft on cetaceans: implications for aerial whale-watching. In Proceedings of the 61st Meeting of the International Whaling Commission, Madeira, Portugal, May 2009.
  • Lusseau, D. (2003a). Effects of tour boats on the behavior of bottlenose dolphins: using Markov chains to model anthropogenic impacts. Conservation Biology, 17(6), 1785–1793.
  • Lusseau, D. (2003b). Male and female bottlenose dolphins Tursiops spp. have different strategies to avoid interactions with tour boats in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 257, 267–274.
  • Lusseau, D. (2006). The short-term behavioral reactions of bottlenose dolphins to interactions with boats in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand. Marine Mammal Science, 22(4), 802–818
  • Madsen, P. T., Payne, R., Kristiansen, N. U., Wahlberg, M., Kerr, I., ve Mèhl, B. (2002). Sperm whale sound production studied with ultrasound time/depth-recording tags. Journal of Experimental Biology, 205, 1899–1906.
  • Mann, J., Connor, R. C., Barre, L. M., ve Heithaus, M. R. (2000). Female reproductive success in bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops sp.): life history, habitat, provisioning, and group-size effects. Behavioral Ecology, 11(2), 210–219.
  • Mann, J., ve Kemps, C. (2003). The effects of provisioning on maternal care in wild bottlenose dolphins, Shark Bay, Australia. In Marine Mammals: Fisheries, Tourism and Management Issues (N. Gales, M. Hindell, and R. Kirkwood, Eds., pp. 304–317). CSIRO, Collingwood, Australia.
  • Matsuda, N., Shirakihara, M., ve Shirakihara, K. (2011). Effects of dolphin-watching boats on the behavior of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins off Amakusa-Shimoshima Island, Japan. Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi, 77(1), 8–14.
  • Mattson, M. C., Thomas, J. A., ve St. Aubin, D. (2005). The effect of boat activity on the behavior of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in waters surrounding Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. Aquatic Mammals, 31, 133–140.
  • Meynecke, J. O., Richards, R., ve Sahin, O. (2017). Whale watch or no watch: the Australian whale watching tourism industry and climate change. Regional Environmental Change, 17, 477-488
  • Neil, D. T., ve Holmes, B. J. (2008). Survival of bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops sp.) calves at a wild dolphin provisioning program, Tangalooma, Australia. Anthrozoos, 21(1), 57–69.
  • O’Connor, S. O., Campbell, R., Cortez, H., ve Knowles, T. (2009). Whale Watching Worldwide: Tourism Numbers, Expenditures and Expanding Economic Benefits. A Special Report from the International Fund for Animal Welfare, IFAW and Economists at Large, Yarmouth, Mass, USA.
  • Orams, M. B. (1996). A conceptual model for tourist-wildlife interaction: The case for education as a management strategy. Australian Geographer, 27, 39–51.
  • Orams, M. B., Hill, G. J. E., ve Baglioni, A. J. (1996). ‘Pushy’ behavior in a wild dolphin feeding program at Tangalooma, Australia. Marine Mammal Science, 12(1), 107–117.
  • Orams, M. B. (2002). Feeding wildlife as a tourism attraction: A review of issues and impacts. Tourism Management, 23(3), 281–293.
  • Özbilgin, Y., Kalecik, E., ve Gücü, A. (2018). First record of humpback dolphins in Mersin Bay, the Eastern Mediterranean, Turkey. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 18(1), 187-190.
  • Öztürk, A. A., Tonay, A. M., ve Dede, A. (2013). Sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) sightings in the Aegean and Mediterranean part of Turkish waters. Journal of Black Sea/Mediterranean Environment, 19(2), 169-177.
  • Parsons, E. C. M. (2012). The negative impacts of whale-watching. Journal of Marine Sciences, 2012.
  • Parsons, E.C.M., Shrimpton, J., ve Evans, P.G.H. (1999) Cetacean conservation in northwest Scotland: Perceived threats to cetaceans. European Research on Cetaceans, 13, 128–133
  • Parsons, E. C. M., Warburton, C. A., Woods-Ballard, A., Hughes, A., Johnston, P., Bates, H., ve Lück, M. (2003). Whale-watching tourists in West Scotland. Journal of Ecotourism, 2(2), 93-113.
  • Richter, C., Dawson, S., & Slooten, E. (2006). Impacts of commercial whale watching on male sperm whales at Kaikoura, New Zealand. Marine Mammal Science, 22(1), 46–63.
  • Russell, C. L. (2001). Why study whale watching? Environmental education, nature experience, and the social construction of nature. In D. Hodson (Ed.), OISE Papers in STSE Education. Imperial Oil Centre for Studies in Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, Toronto, Canada.
  • Scarpaci, C., Bigger, S. W., Corkeron, P. J., ve Nugegoda, D. (2000). Bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus, increase whistling in the presence of "swim-with-dolphin" tour operations. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 2, 183–185.
  • Seuront, L., ve Cribb, N. (2011). Fractal analysis reveals pernicious stress levels related to boat presence and type in the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin, Tursiops aduncus. Physica A, 390(12), 2333–2339.
  • Shrimpton, J. H., ve Parsons, E. C. M. (2000). Cetacean Conservation in West Scotland. Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust, Tobermory, Mull, UK.
  • Smith, H., Samuels, A., ve Bradley, S. (2008). Reducing risky interactions between tourists and free-ranging dolphins (Tursiops sp.) in an artificial feeding program at Monkey Mia, Western Australia. Tourism Management, 29(5), 994–1001.
  • Stockin, K. A., Lusseau, D., Binedell, V., Wiseman, N., ve Orams, M. B. (2008). Tourism affects the behavioral budget of the common dolphin Delphinus sp. in the Hauraki Gulf, New Zealand. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 355, 287–295.
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  • Woods-Ballard, A., Parsons, E. C. M., Hughes, A. J., Velander, K. A., Ladle, R. J., ve Warburton, C. A. (2003). The sustainability of whale-watching in Scotland. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 11, 40–55.
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Ekoturizm Çeşidi Olarak Balina Gözlemi ve Türkiye’deki Potansiyeli Üzerine Bir Araştırma

Yıl 2024, Cilt: 8 Sayı: 1, 50 - 60, 30.06.2024
https://doi.org/10.30625/ijctr.1401848

Öz

Uluslararası Balinacılık Kuruluna (IWC) göre “Balinaları doğal ortamlarında gözlemek amaçlı yapılan ticari aktivite” olarak tanımlanan balina ve yunus türlerinin hepsi için geçerli olan balina gözlemleri, 1950li yılların başında Amerika’da ortaya çıkmış olsada 1980li yıllardan sonra hız kazanarak dünya’nın birçok bölgesine yayılmış ve küresel olarak Milyar dolarlık bir sektör olarak kendine yer edinmiştir. 70’li yıllarda başlayan balina avcılığı karşıtı hareketlerin 1986 yılında IWC tarafından balina av yasağını başlatmasıyla sonuçlanmasının ardından balinalar denizel koruma çalışmaları için önemli karizmatik türü haline gelmiştir. Dünya çapında 80li yıllardan itibaren başarılı örnekleri olan bu sektör açısından ülkemiz potansiyel incelendiğinde 8 balina ve yunus (Cetacea) türünün ülkemizin farklı denizlerinde bulunmasının lokal ekonomiye ve denizel koruma çalışmalarına önemli katkı yapabileceği öngörülmüştür. Doğru uygulandığı örneklerinde sosyo-ekonomik, eğitim ve koruma gibi birçok başlıkta katkı sağlamasının yanında vatandaş bilimi ekseninde olacak çalışmalarıyla ülkemizdeki cetacea türleri için sürekli veri akışı sağlayabileceği bilinmektedir. Bu çalışmada pozitif ve negatif etkileriyle beraber ülkemize ticari amaçlı cetacean gözleminin potansiyeli değerlendirilmiştir.

Kaynakça

  • Alan, V. (2015). İzmir Körfezinde yaşayan Cetacea türlerinin popülasyonları üzerine bir araştırma (Yüksek Lisans Tezi, Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü).
  • Akkaya, A., Lyne, P., Schulz, X., Awbery, T., Capitain, S., Rosell, B. F., ... ve Gordon, J. (2020). Preliminary results of cetacean sightings in the eastern Mediterranean Sea of Turkey. Journal of the Black Sea/Mediterranean Environment, 26(1), 26-47.
  • Allen, M. C., ve Read, A. J. (2000). Habitat selection of foraging bottlenose dolphins in relation to boat density near Clearwater, Florida. Marine Mammal Science, 16(4), 815-824.
  • Arcangeli, A., Crosti, R., del Leviatano, A., ve Rome, I. (2009). The short-term impact of dolphin-watching on the behaviour of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in western Australia. Journal of Marine Animals and their Ecology, 2(1), 3-9.
  • Arnold, H. (1997). The Dolphin Space Programme: The development and assessment of an accreditation scheme for dolphin watching boats in the Moray Firth (Report for the Scottish Wildlife Trust, Scottish Natural Heritage and the EU Life Programme).
  • Awbery, T., et al. (2021). Combining Data Sources to Understand the Fine-Scale Distribution and Encounter Rates of Common Dolphins Delphinus delphis in one of the busiest waterways in the world, the Istanbul Strait. In 2021 International Workshop on Metrology for the Sea; Learning to Measure Sea Health Parameters (MetroSea), Reggio Calabria, Italy, pp. 134-138. doi: 10.1109/MetroSea52177.2021.9611577.
  • Bass, J. (2000). Variations in gray whale feeding behavior in the presence of whale-watching vessels in Clayoquot Sound, 1993-1995 (Doctoral dissertation).
  • Baş, A. A., Öztürk, B., ve Öztürk, A. A. (2019). Encounter rate, residency pattern and site fidelity of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) within the Istanbul Strait, Turkey. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 99(4), 1009-1016.
  • Bejder, L., Samuels, A., Whitehead, H., & Gales, N. (2006). Interpreting short-term behavioural responses to disturbance within a longitudinal perspective. Animal Behaviour, 72(5), 1149–1158.
  • Bejder, L., Samuels, A., Whitehead, H., et al. (2006). Decline in relative abundance of bottlenose dolphins exposed to long-term disturbance. Conservation Biology, 20(6), 1791–1798.
  • Boran, J.R., Evans, P.G.H., ve Rosen, M.J. (2000). Cetaceans of the Hebrides: Seven years of surveys. European Research on Cetaceans, 13, 169–174.
  • Buckstaff, K. C. (2004). Effects of watercraft noise on the acoustic behavior of bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus, in Sarasota Bay, Florida. Marine Mammal Science, 20(4), 709–725.
  • Ceballos-Lascuráin, H. (1996). Tourism, ecotourism, and protected areas. https://doi.org/10.2305/iucn.ch.1996.7.en
  • Childerhouse, S. J., Dawson, S. M., ve Slooten, E. (1995). Abundance and seasonal residence of sperm whales at Kaikoura, New Zealand. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 73, 723–731.
  • Cisneros-Montemayor, A. M., Sumaila, U. R., Kaschner, K., & Pauly, D. (2010). The global potential for whale watching. Marine Policy, 34, 1273–1278. doi:10.1016/j.marpol.2010.05.005.
  • Constantine, R., Brunton, D. H., ve Dennis, T. (2004). Dolphin-watching tour boats change bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) behavior. Biological Conservation, 117(3), 299–307.
  • Dede, A., Tonay, M., & Gönülal, O. (2020). First sighting of false killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens) in the northern Aegean Sea. Journal of the Black Sea/Mediterranean Environment, 26(1), 106-111.
  • Deveciyan, K. (1926). Peche et pecheries en Turquie. Administration de la Dette Publique Ottomane. Donaldson, R., Finn, H., & Calver, M. (2010). Illegal feeding increases risk of boat-strike and entanglement in Bottlenose Dolphins in Perth, Western Australia. Pacific Conservation Biology, 16(3), 157–161.
  • Forestell, P. H. (1993). If Leviathan has a face, does Gaia have a soul? Incorporating environmental education in marine eco-tourism programs. Ocean and Coastal Management, 20, 267–282. Glossary of tourism terms | UNWTO. (2019). https://www.unwto.org/glossary-tourism-terms.
  • Hastie, G. D., Wilson, B., Tufft, L. H., ve Thompson, P. M. (2003). Bottlenose dolphins increase breathing synchrony in response to boat traffic. Marine Mammal Science, 19(1), 74–84.
  • Horn, C., Simmons, D. G., & Fairweather, J. R. (1998). Evolution and change in Kaikoura: Responses to tourism development. Tourism Recreation Research and Education Centre, Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand. 97 pp.
  • Hoyt, E. (1994). The increase of whale watching. European Cetacean Society Newsletter, 2, 8–9
  • Hoyt, E. (1995). The Worldwide Value and Extent of Whale Watching. Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, Bath.
  • Hoyt, E. (2001). Whale Watching 2001: Worldwide Tourism Numbers, Expenditures and Expanding Socioeconomic Benefits. Yarmouth Port, MA: International Fund for Animal Welfare.
  • IFAW, Tethys Research Institute, and Europe Conservation. (1995). Report of the Workshop on the Scientific Aspects of Managing Whale Watching. Montecastello di Vibio, Italy. 40 pp.
  • IFAW. (1996). Report of the Workshop on the Special Aspects of Watching Sperm Whales. Roseau, Commonwealth of Dominica. 36 pp.
  • IFAW, WWF, and WDCS. (1997). Report of the International Workshop on the Educational Values of Whale Watching. Provincetown, MA, USA. 40 pp.
  • IFAW. (1999). Report of the Workshop on the Socioeconomic Aspects of Whale Watching. Kaikoura, New Zealand. 88 pp.
  • International Whaling Commission. (1994). Chairman’s report of the forty-fifth annual meeting. Appendix 9. IWC resolution on whale watching. Reports of the International Whaling Commission, 44, 33–34.
  • International Whaling Commission. (2007). Report of the scientific committee. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 9(supplement), 1–73.
  • International Whaling Commission. (2009). Report of the scientific committee. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 11(supplement), 1–74.
  • Janik, V. M., ve Thompson, P. M. (1996). Changes in surfacing patterns of bottlenose dolphins in response to boat traffic. Marine Mammal Science, 12, 597–602.
  • Jaquet, N., Dawson, S., ve Slooten, E. (2000). Seasonal distribution and diving behaviour of male sperm whales off Kaikoura: Foraging implications. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 78, 407–419.
  • Jensen, F. H., Wahlberg, M., Bejder, L., ve Madsen, P. (2008). Noise levels and masking potential of small whale watching and research vessels around two delphinid species. Bioacoustics, 17, 166–168. Katona, S., ve Whitehead, H. (1988). Are cetacea ecologically important. Oceanogr Mar Biol Annu Rev, 26, 553-568.
  • Leaper, R. (2001). Summary of data on ship strikes of large cetaceans from progress reports (1996–2000). In Proceedings of the 53rd Meeting of the International Whaling Commission, London, UK, July 2001.
  • Luksenburg, J., ve Parsons, E. C. M. (2009). Effects of aircraft on cetaceans: implications for aerial whale-watching. In Proceedings of the 61st Meeting of the International Whaling Commission, Madeira, Portugal, May 2009.
  • Lusseau, D. (2003a). Effects of tour boats on the behavior of bottlenose dolphins: using Markov chains to model anthropogenic impacts. Conservation Biology, 17(6), 1785–1793.
  • Lusseau, D. (2003b). Male and female bottlenose dolphins Tursiops spp. have different strategies to avoid interactions with tour boats in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 257, 267–274.
  • Lusseau, D. (2006). The short-term behavioral reactions of bottlenose dolphins to interactions with boats in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand. Marine Mammal Science, 22(4), 802–818
  • Madsen, P. T., Payne, R., Kristiansen, N. U., Wahlberg, M., Kerr, I., ve Mèhl, B. (2002). Sperm whale sound production studied with ultrasound time/depth-recording tags. Journal of Experimental Biology, 205, 1899–1906.
  • Mann, J., Connor, R. C., Barre, L. M., ve Heithaus, M. R. (2000). Female reproductive success in bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops sp.): life history, habitat, provisioning, and group-size effects. Behavioral Ecology, 11(2), 210–219.
  • Mann, J., ve Kemps, C. (2003). The effects of provisioning on maternal care in wild bottlenose dolphins, Shark Bay, Australia. In Marine Mammals: Fisheries, Tourism and Management Issues (N. Gales, M. Hindell, and R. Kirkwood, Eds., pp. 304–317). CSIRO, Collingwood, Australia.
  • Matsuda, N., Shirakihara, M., ve Shirakihara, K. (2011). Effects of dolphin-watching boats on the behavior of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins off Amakusa-Shimoshima Island, Japan. Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi, 77(1), 8–14.
  • Mattson, M. C., Thomas, J. A., ve St. Aubin, D. (2005). The effect of boat activity on the behavior of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in waters surrounding Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. Aquatic Mammals, 31, 133–140.
  • Meynecke, J. O., Richards, R., ve Sahin, O. (2017). Whale watch or no watch: the Australian whale watching tourism industry and climate change. Regional Environmental Change, 17, 477-488
  • Neil, D. T., ve Holmes, B. J. (2008). Survival of bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops sp.) calves at a wild dolphin provisioning program, Tangalooma, Australia. Anthrozoos, 21(1), 57–69.
  • O’Connor, S. O., Campbell, R., Cortez, H., ve Knowles, T. (2009). Whale Watching Worldwide: Tourism Numbers, Expenditures and Expanding Economic Benefits. A Special Report from the International Fund for Animal Welfare, IFAW and Economists at Large, Yarmouth, Mass, USA.
  • Orams, M. B. (1996). A conceptual model for tourist-wildlife interaction: The case for education as a management strategy. Australian Geographer, 27, 39–51.
  • Orams, M. B., Hill, G. J. E., ve Baglioni, A. J. (1996). ‘Pushy’ behavior in a wild dolphin feeding program at Tangalooma, Australia. Marine Mammal Science, 12(1), 107–117.
  • Orams, M. B. (2002). Feeding wildlife as a tourism attraction: A review of issues and impacts. Tourism Management, 23(3), 281–293.
  • Özbilgin, Y., Kalecik, E., ve Gücü, A. (2018). First record of humpback dolphins in Mersin Bay, the Eastern Mediterranean, Turkey. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 18(1), 187-190.
  • Öztürk, A. A., Tonay, A. M., ve Dede, A. (2013). Sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) sightings in the Aegean and Mediterranean part of Turkish waters. Journal of Black Sea/Mediterranean Environment, 19(2), 169-177.
  • Parsons, E. C. M. (2012). The negative impacts of whale-watching. Journal of Marine Sciences, 2012.
  • Parsons, E.C.M., Shrimpton, J., ve Evans, P.G.H. (1999) Cetacean conservation in northwest Scotland: Perceived threats to cetaceans. European Research on Cetaceans, 13, 128–133
  • Parsons, E. C. M., Warburton, C. A., Woods-Ballard, A., Hughes, A., Johnston, P., Bates, H., ve Lück, M. (2003). Whale-watching tourists in West Scotland. Journal of Ecotourism, 2(2), 93-113.
  • Richter, C., Dawson, S., & Slooten, E. (2006). Impacts of commercial whale watching on male sperm whales at Kaikoura, New Zealand. Marine Mammal Science, 22(1), 46–63.
  • Russell, C. L. (2001). Why study whale watching? Environmental education, nature experience, and the social construction of nature. In D. Hodson (Ed.), OISE Papers in STSE Education. Imperial Oil Centre for Studies in Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, Toronto, Canada.
  • Scarpaci, C., Bigger, S. W., Corkeron, P. J., ve Nugegoda, D. (2000). Bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus, increase whistling in the presence of "swim-with-dolphin" tour operations. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 2, 183–185.
  • Seuront, L., ve Cribb, N. (2011). Fractal analysis reveals pernicious stress levels related to boat presence and type in the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin, Tursiops aduncus. Physica A, 390(12), 2333–2339.
  • Shrimpton, J. H., ve Parsons, E. C. M. (2000). Cetacean Conservation in West Scotland. Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust, Tobermory, Mull, UK.
  • Smith, H., Samuels, A., ve Bradley, S. (2008). Reducing risky interactions between tourists and free-ranging dolphins (Tursiops sp.) in an artificial feeding program at Monkey Mia, Western Australia. Tourism Management, 29(5), 994–1001.
  • Stockin, K. A., Lusseau, D., Binedell, V., Wiseman, N., ve Orams, M. B. (2008). Tourism affects the behavioral budget of the common dolphin Delphinus sp. in the Hauraki Gulf, New Zealand. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 355, 287–295.
  • Tao, M. (2022). Sustainable whale-watching tourism or vulnerable" wild west" in the sea: the management and perceptions of different whale-watching actors in the Tromsø and Skjervøy regions (Master's thesis, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås). International Tourism Highlights, 2019 Edition. World Tourism Organization (UNWTO). doi:10.18111/9789284421152. ISBN 978-92-844-2115-2.
  • Visser, F., Hartman, K. L., Rood, E. J. J., et al. (2011). Risso’s dolphins alter daily resting pattern in response to whale watching at the Azores. Marine Mammal Science, 27(2), 366–381
  • Williams, R., Trites, A. W., ve Bain, D. E. (2002). Behavioural responses of killer whales (Orcinus orca) to whale-watching boats: Opportunistic observations and experimental approaches. Journal of Zoology, 256, 255–270.
  • Woods-Ballard, A., Parsons, E. C. M., Hughes, A. J., Velander, K. A., Ladle, R. J., ve Warburton, C. A. (2003). The sustainability of whale-watching in Scotland. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 11, 40–55.
  • Würsig, B., ve Jefferson, T. A. (1974). Methods of photo-identification for small cetaceans. to Estimate Population Parameters, 43.
  • Deniz Turizmi Tesisleri ve Araçları İstatistikleri. (n.d.). https://yigm.ktb.gov.tr/TR-201146/deniz-turizmi-tesisleri-ve-araclari-istatistikleri.html 2023 | TÜRSAB. (2023.). https://www.tursab.org.tr/turizm-geliri/turizm-geliri-2023
Toplam 68 adet kaynakça vardır.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil Türkçe
Konular Sürdürülebilir Turizm, Turizmde Çevre Yönetimi, Turizm (Diğer)
Bölüm Özgün Bilimsel Makale
Yazarlar

Cenk Durmuşkahya 0000-0002-8092-9770

Efecan İştipliler Bu kişi benim

Erken Görünüm Tarihi 30 Haziran 2024
Yayımlanma Tarihi 30 Haziran 2024
Gönderilme Tarihi 7 Aralık 2023
Kabul Tarihi 14 Mayıs 2024
Yayımlandığı Sayı Yıl 2024 Cilt: 8 Sayı: 1

Kaynak Göster

APA Durmuşkahya, C., & İştipliler, E. (2024). Ekoturizm Çeşidi Olarak Balina Gözlemi ve Türkiye’deki Potansiyeli Üzerine Bir Araştırma. International Journal of Contemporary Tourism Research, 8(1), 50-60. https://doi.org/10.30625/ijctr.1401848