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Documenting perceptions and misconceptions of shark conservation among students in Ghanaian coastal communities within the context of shark tourism

Year 2024, , 39 - 45, 31.03.2024
https://doi.org/10.24288/jttr.1442899

Abstract

In Ghana, students have rarely been engaged in shark conservation programs. The study aimed to provide the perceptions and misconceptions about sharks among students in Ghana. From the Western region of Ghana, two senior high schools were visited from March to June 2023, and 111 questionnaires were administered to them with the assistance of a resident teacher. Most of these students believe that i) sharks do not eat humankind as food, ii) fishing activities do not affect shark behavior, iii) the decline in fish does not affect the shark population, and iv) fishermen in Ghana face a lot of shark attacks. On perceptions, most of the students perceived that i) shark fishing should not be stopped, ii) shark ecotourism will yield more money than shark fishing, and iii) MPAs will conserve shark population in Ghana. From the study, it was evident that knowledge and attitudes showed a strong positive correlation (r = 0.61). Therefore, incorporating shark related topics into the curricula of schools, taking students on educational tours to the fishing communities, and engaging them in outreach programs will enlighten their knowledge of sharks and foster their awareness of shark conservation and shark ecotourism in Ghana.

References

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  • Agyeman, N. A., Blanco-Fernandez, C., Steinhaussen, S. L., Garcia-Vazquez, E., & Machado-Schiaffino, G. (2021). Illegal, unreported, and unregulated fisheries threatening shark conservation in African waters revealed from high levels of shark mislabelling in Ghana. Genes, 12(7), 1002.
  • Ajiboye, J. O., & Silo, N. (2008). Enhancing Botswana children’s environmental knowledge, attitudes and practices through the school civic clubs.
  • Albano, P. S., Fallows, C., Fallows, M., Schuitema, O., Bernard, A. T., Sedgwick, O., & Hammerschlag, N. (2021). Successful parks for sharks: No-take marine reserve provides conservation benefits to endemic and threatened sharks off South Africa. Biological Conservation, 261, 109302.
  • Amponsah, S. K., Ackah, R., Amekor, W. D., Berchie, A., & Apraku, A. (2023). Shark Fishing in Ghana: What We Ought to Know. In Sharks-Past, Present and Future. IntechOpen.
  • Bargnesi, F., Lucrezi, S., Ferretti, F., 2020. Opportunities from citizen science for shark conservation, with a focus on the Mediterranean Sea. The European Zoological Journal, 87 (1), 20-34.
  • Beall, J. M., Pharr, L. D., von Furstenberg, R., Barber, A., Casola, W. R., Vaughn, A. & Larson, L. R. (2022). The influence of YouTube videos on human tolerance of sharks. Animal Conservation.
  • Bornatowski, H., Braga, R.R., Vitule, J.R.S., 2013. Shark mislabeling threatens biodiversity. Science 340 (6135), 923, 923-923.
  • Brobbey, L. K., Seidu, I., Oppong, S. K., & Danquah, E. (2021). Fishing for survival: Importance of shark fisheries for the livelihoods of coastal communities in Western Ghana.
  • Brown, T. (2021). Decline of Sharks Negatively Impacts Marine Ecosystems: A Review of Trophic Cascades with Emphasis on Behavior.
  • Casola, W.R., Rushing, J., Futch, S., Vayer, V., Lawson, D.F., Cavalieri, M.J., Larson, L.R. & Peterson, M.N. (2020). How do YouTube videos impact tolerance of wolves? Hum. Dimens. Wildl. 25, 531–543.
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  • de Pinho, J. R., Grilo, C., Boone, R. B., Galvin, K. A., & Snodgrass, J. G. (2014). Influence of aesthetic appreciation of wildlife species on attitudes towards their conservation in Kenyan agropastoralist communities. PloS One, 9(2), e88842.
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  • Guay, J. D., Brooks, J. L., Chapman, J. M., Medd, H., Cooke, S. J., & Nguyen, V. M. (2023). Exploring the hidden connections between information channel use and pro-environmental behavior among recreational anglers of the shore-based shark fishery in Florida, United States. Frontiers in Communication, 7, 272.
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  • Heithaus, M.R., Frid, A., Wirsing, A.J. & Worm, B. (2008). Predicting ecological consequences of marine top predator declines. Trends Ecol. Evol. 23, 202–210.
  • Jacobson, S.K., Morales, N.A., Chen, B., Soodeen, R., Moulton, M.P. & Jain, E. (2019). Love or loss: effective message framing to promote environmental conservation. Appl. Environ. Educ. Commun. 18, 252–265.
  • Johnson III, R. M., Gilman, S. L., & Abel, D. C. (2023). Tooth and Claw: Top Predators of the World. Princeton University Press.
  • Kaczensky, P., Blazic, M. & Gossow, H. (2004). Public attitudes towards brown bears (Ursus acrtos) in Solvenia. Biol. Conserv. 118, 661–674.
  • Kioko, J. (2010). Youth’s Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices in Wildlife and Environmental Conservation in Maasailand, Kenya John Kioko and John Warui Kiringe. Center for Wildlife Management Studies, Kenya. Southern African Journal of Environmental Education, 27.
  • Knight, J. (2008). Higher education in turmoil: The changing world of internationalization. Brill.
  • Kothari, C.R. (2004). Research methodology: Methods and techniques. New Age International.
  • Kraft, D., Meyer, L., Webb, M., Scidmore‐Rossing, K., Huveneers, C., Clua, E., & Meyer, C. (2021). Development and successful real‐world use of a transfer DNA technique to identify species involved in shark bite incidents. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 66(6), 2438-2443.
  • Le Busque, B., Dorrian, J., Litchfield, C., 2021. The impact of news media portrayals of sharks on public perception of risk and support for shark conservation. Marine Policy, 124, 104341.
  • MacKeracher, T., Mizrahi, M. I., Bergseth, B., Maung, K. M. C., Khine, Z. L., Phyu, E. T., & Diedrich, A. (2021). Understanding non-compliance in small-scale fisheries: Shark fishing in Myanmar’s Myeik Archipelago. Ambio, 50, 572-585.
  • Musiello-Fernandes, J., Zappes, C. A., Braga, H. O., & Hostim-Silva, M. (2021). Artisanal fishers’ local ecological knowledge and attitudes toward conservation about the shrimp (Xiphopenaeus kroyeri) on the Brazilian central coast. Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências, 93.
  • Papageorgiou, M., GT, E. B., Snape, R., & Hadjioannou, L. (2022). Increased knowledge affects public attitude and perception towards elasmobranchs and support for conservation. Mediterranean Marine Science, 23(3), 637-649.
  • Pham, M. T. (2007). Emotion and rationality: A critical review and interpretation of empirical evidence. Review of General Psychology, 11(2), 155-178.
  • Pooley, J. A., & o’Connor, M. (2000). Environmental education and attitudes: Emotions and beliefs are what is needed. Environment and Behavior, 32(5), 711-723.
  • Røskaft, E., Bjerke, T., Kaltenborn, B., Linnell, J.D. & Andersen, R. (2003). Patterns of self-reported fear towards large carnivores among the Norwegian public. Evol. Hum. Behav. 24, 184–198
  • Sall, A., Failler, P., Drakeford, B., & March, A. (2021). Fisher migrations: social and economic perspectives on the emerging shark fishery in West Africa. African Identities, 19(3), 284-303.
  • Seidu, I., Brobbey, L. K., Danquah, E., Oppong, S. K., van Beuningen, D., Seidu, M., & Dulvy, N. K. (2022). Fishing for survival: Importance of shark fisheries for the livelihoods of coastal communities in Western Ghana. Fisheries Research, 246, 106157.
  • Seidu, I., Brobbey, L. K., Danquah, E., Oppong, S. K., van Beuningen, D., & Dulvy, N. K. (2022). Local Ecological Knowledge, Catch Characteristics, and Evidence of Elasmobranch Depletions in Western Ghana Artisanal Fisheries. Human Ecology, 1-16.
  • Seidu, S., Cos, X., Brunton, S., Harris, S. B., Jansson, S. P., Mata-Cases, M., & Khunti, K. (2022). 2022 update to the position statement by Primary Care Diabetes Europe: a disease state approach to the pharmacological management of type 2 diabetes in primary care. Primary Care Diabetes.
  • Sekey, W., Obirikorang, K. A., Alimo, T. A., Soku, M., Acquah, B., Gyampoh, B. A., ... & Kassah, J. E. (2022). Evaluation of the shark fisheries along the Coastline of Ghana, West Africa. Regional Studies in Marine Science, 53, 102434.
  • Sherman, C. S., Heupel, M. R., Moore, S. K., Chin, A., & Simpfendorfer, C. A. (2020). When sharks are away, rays will play: effects of top predator removal in coral reef ecosystems. Marine Ecology Progress
  • Sherman, C. S., Simpfendorfer, C. A., Haque, A. B., Digel, E. D., Zubick, P., Eged, J., & Dulvy, N. K. (2022). Guitarfishes are plucked: undermanaged in global fisheries despite declining populations and high volume of unreported international trade. BioRxiv, 2022-10.
  • Shiffman, D. S., Bittick, S. J., Cashion, M. S., Colla, S. R., Coristine, L. E., Derrick, D. H., & Dulvy, N. K. (2020). Inaccurate and biased global media coverage underlies public misunderstanding of shark conservation threats and solutions. Iscience, 23(6), 101205.
  • Smith-Sebasto, N. J., & Cavern, L. (2006). Effects of pre-and posttrip activities associated with a residential environmental education experience on students' attitudes toward the environment. The Journal of Environmental Education, 37(4), 3-17.
  • Thu, H., & Minh, T. (2013). School Violence: Evidence from Young Lives in Vietnam.
  • Tsoi, K. H., Chan, S. Y., Lee, Y. C., Ip, B. H. Y., & Cheang, C. C. (2016). Shark conservation: an educational approach based on children’s knowledge and perceptions toward sharks. PloS one, 11(9), e0163406.
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Year 2024, , 39 - 45, 31.03.2024
https://doi.org/10.24288/jttr.1442899

Abstract

References

  • Ackah, R., Amekor, W. D., & Amponsah, S. K.K (2022). Population Dynamics of Shark Species in the Coast Of Ghana, West Africa. Research in Agriculture Livestock and Fisheries, 9(3), 353-365.
  • Acuña-Marrero, D., de la Cruz-Modino, R., Smith, A.N., Salinas-de-León, P., Pawley, M.D. & Anderson, M.J. (2018). Understanding human attitudes towards sharks to promote sustainable coexistence. Mar. Policy 91, 122– 128.
  • Agyeman, N. A., Blanco-Fernandez, C., Steinhaussen, S. L., Garcia-Vazquez, E., & Machado-Schiaffino, G. (2021). Illegal, unreported, and unregulated fisheries threatening shark conservation in African waters revealed from high levels of shark mislabelling in Ghana. Genes, 12(7), 1002.
  • Ajiboye, J. O., & Silo, N. (2008). Enhancing Botswana children’s environmental knowledge, attitudes and practices through the school civic clubs.
  • Albano, P. S., Fallows, C., Fallows, M., Schuitema, O., Bernard, A. T., Sedgwick, O., & Hammerschlag, N. (2021). Successful parks for sharks: No-take marine reserve provides conservation benefits to endemic and threatened sharks off South Africa. Biological Conservation, 261, 109302.
  • Amponsah, S. K., Ackah, R., Amekor, W. D., Berchie, A., & Apraku, A. (2023). Shark Fishing in Ghana: What We Ought to Know. In Sharks-Past, Present and Future. IntechOpen.
  • Bargnesi, F., Lucrezi, S., Ferretti, F., 2020. Opportunities from citizen science for shark conservation, with a focus on the Mediterranean Sea. The European Zoological Journal, 87 (1), 20-34.
  • Beall, J. M., Pharr, L. D., von Furstenberg, R., Barber, A., Casola, W. R., Vaughn, A. & Larson, L. R. (2022). The influence of YouTube videos on human tolerance of sharks. Animal Conservation.
  • Bornatowski, H., Braga, R.R., Vitule, J.R.S., 2013. Shark mislabeling threatens biodiversity. Science 340 (6135), 923, 923-923.
  • Brobbey, L. K., Seidu, I., Oppong, S. K., & Danquah, E. (2021). Fishing for survival: Importance of shark fisheries for the livelihoods of coastal communities in Western Ghana.
  • Brown, T. (2021). Decline of Sharks Negatively Impacts Marine Ecosystems: A Review of Trophic Cascades with Emphasis on Behavior.
  • Casola, W.R., Rushing, J., Futch, S., Vayer, V., Lawson, D.F., Cavalieri, M.J., Larson, L.R. & Peterson, M.N. (2020). How do YouTube videos impact tolerance of wolves? Hum. Dimens. Wildl. 25, 531–543.
  • Clarke, S., Milner-Gulland, E.J., Bjørndal, T., 2007. Social, economic, and regulatory drivers of the shark fin trade. Mar. Resour. Econ. 22 (3), 305–327.
  • de Pinho, J. R., Grilo, C., Boone, R. B., Galvin, K. A., & Snodgrass, J. G. (2014). Influence of aesthetic appreciation of wildlife species on attitudes towards their conservation in Kenyan agropastoralist communities. PloS One, 9(2), e88842.
  • Dillon, E. M., McCauley, D. J., Morales-Saldaña, J. M., Leonard, N. D., Zhao, J. X., & O’Dea, A. (2021). Fossil dermal denticles reveal the preexploitation baseline of a Caribbean coral reef shark community. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 118(29), e2017735118.
  • Dovlo, E., Amador, K., & Nkrumah, B. (2016). Information Report NO 36.
  • Erhabor, N. I., & Don, J. U. (2016). Impact of Environmental Education on the Knowledge and Attitude of Students towards the Environment. International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 11(12), 5367-5375.
  • Ferretti, F., Jacoby, D. M., Pfleger, M. O., White, T. D., Dent, F., Micheli, F., & Block, B. A. (2020). Shark fin trade bans and sustainable shark fisheries. Conservation Letters, 13(3), e12708.
  • Ferretti, F., Worm, B., Britten, G.L., Heithaus, M.R. & Lotze, H.K. (2010). Patterns and ecosystem consequences of shark declines in the ocean. Ecol. Lett. 13, 1055–1071.
  • Garla, R. C., Chapman, D. D., Wetherbee, B. M., & Shivji, M. (2006). Movement patterns of young Caribbean reef sharks, Carcharhinus perezi, at Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, Brazil: the potential of marine protected areas for conservation of a nursery ground. Marine Biology, 149, 189-199.
  • Garla, R. C., Freitas, R. H., Calado, J. F., Paterno, G. B., & Carvalho, A. R. (2015). Public awareness of the economic potential and threats to sharks of a tropical oceanic archipelago in the western South Atlantic. Marine Policy, 60, 128-133.
  • Giovos, I., Barash, A., Barone, M., Barría, C., Borme, D. et al., 2021. Understanding the public attitude towards sharks for improving their conservation. Marine Policy, 134, 104811.
  • Gonzáles-Mantilla, P. G., Gallagher, A. J., León, C. J., & Vianna, G. M. (2021). Challenges and conservation potential of shark-diving tourism in the Macaronesian archipelagos. Marine Policy, 131, 104632.
  • GSS, Ghana Statistical Services, 2014, 2010 Population and housing census: District analytical report. Ghana: Accessed June, 8, 2019.
  • Guay, J. D., Brooks, J. L., Chapman, J. M., Medd, H., Cooke, S. J., & Nguyen, V. M. (2023). Exploring the hidden connections between information channel use and pro-environmental behavior among recreational anglers of the shore-based shark fishery in Florida, United States. Frontiers in Communication, 7, 272.
  • Gulmira, M., Kuralay, T., Doskeyeva, S., Zhanar, A., & Sekey, Z. (2022). Cypriot Journal of Educational Sciences. Sciences, 17(10), 3625-3637.
  • Hariohay, K. M., Fyumagwa, R. D., Kideghesho, J. R., & Røskaft, E. (2018). Awareness and attitudes of local people toward wildlife conservation in the Rungwa Game Reserve in Central Tanzania. Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 23(6), 503-514.
  • Heithaus, M.R., Frid, A., Wirsing, A.J. & Worm, B. (2008). Predicting ecological consequences of marine top predator declines. Trends Ecol. Evol. 23, 202–210.
  • Jacobson, S.K., Morales, N.A., Chen, B., Soodeen, R., Moulton, M.P. & Jain, E. (2019). Love or loss: effective message framing to promote environmental conservation. Appl. Environ. Educ. Commun. 18, 252–265.
  • Johnson III, R. M., Gilman, S. L., & Abel, D. C. (2023). Tooth and Claw: Top Predators of the World. Princeton University Press.
  • Kaczensky, P., Blazic, M. & Gossow, H. (2004). Public attitudes towards brown bears (Ursus acrtos) in Solvenia. Biol. Conserv. 118, 661–674.
  • Kioko, J. (2010). Youth’s Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices in Wildlife and Environmental Conservation in Maasailand, Kenya John Kioko and John Warui Kiringe. Center for Wildlife Management Studies, Kenya. Southern African Journal of Environmental Education, 27.
  • Knight, J. (2008). Higher education in turmoil: The changing world of internationalization. Brill.
  • Kothari, C.R. (2004). Research methodology: Methods and techniques. New Age International.
  • Kraft, D., Meyer, L., Webb, M., Scidmore‐Rossing, K., Huveneers, C., Clua, E., & Meyer, C. (2021). Development and successful real‐world use of a transfer DNA technique to identify species involved in shark bite incidents. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 66(6), 2438-2443.
  • Le Busque, B., Dorrian, J., Litchfield, C., 2021. The impact of news media portrayals of sharks on public perception of risk and support for shark conservation. Marine Policy, 124, 104341.
  • MacKeracher, T., Mizrahi, M. I., Bergseth, B., Maung, K. M. C., Khine, Z. L., Phyu, E. T., & Diedrich, A. (2021). Understanding non-compliance in small-scale fisheries: Shark fishing in Myanmar’s Myeik Archipelago. Ambio, 50, 572-585.
  • Musiello-Fernandes, J., Zappes, C. A., Braga, H. O., & Hostim-Silva, M. (2021). Artisanal fishers’ local ecological knowledge and attitudes toward conservation about the shrimp (Xiphopenaeus kroyeri) on the Brazilian central coast. Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências, 93.
  • Papageorgiou, M., GT, E. B., Snape, R., & Hadjioannou, L. (2022). Increased knowledge affects public attitude and perception towards elasmobranchs and support for conservation. Mediterranean Marine Science, 23(3), 637-649.
  • Pham, M. T. (2007). Emotion and rationality: A critical review and interpretation of empirical evidence. Review of General Psychology, 11(2), 155-178.
  • Pooley, J. A., & o’Connor, M. (2000). Environmental education and attitudes: Emotions and beliefs are what is needed. Environment and Behavior, 32(5), 711-723.
  • Røskaft, E., Bjerke, T., Kaltenborn, B., Linnell, J.D. & Andersen, R. (2003). Patterns of self-reported fear towards large carnivores among the Norwegian public. Evol. Hum. Behav. 24, 184–198
  • Sall, A., Failler, P., Drakeford, B., & March, A. (2021). Fisher migrations: social and economic perspectives on the emerging shark fishery in West Africa. African Identities, 19(3), 284-303.
  • Seidu, I., Brobbey, L. K., Danquah, E., Oppong, S. K., van Beuningen, D., Seidu, M., & Dulvy, N. K. (2022). Fishing for survival: Importance of shark fisheries for the livelihoods of coastal communities in Western Ghana. Fisheries Research, 246, 106157.
  • Seidu, I., Brobbey, L. K., Danquah, E., Oppong, S. K., van Beuningen, D., & Dulvy, N. K. (2022). Local Ecological Knowledge, Catch Characteristics, and Evidence of Elasmobranch Depletions in Western Ghana Artisanal Fisheries. Human Ecology, 1-16.
  • Seidu, S., Cos, X., Brunton, S., Harris, S. B., Jansson, S. P., Mata-Cases, M., & Khunti, K. (2022). 2022 update to the position statement by Primary Care Diabetes Europe: a disease state approach to the pharmacological management of type 2 diabetes in primary care. Primary Care Diabetes.
  • Sekey, W., Obirikorang, K. A., Alimo, T. A., Soku, M., Acquah, B., Gyampoh, B. A., ... & Kassah, J. E. (2022). Evaluation of the shark fisheries along the Coastline of Ghana, West Africa. Regional Studies in Marine Science, 53, 102434.
  • Sherman, C. S., Heupel, M. R., Moore, S. K., Chin, A., & Simpfendorfer, C. A. (2020). When sharks are away, rays will play: effects of top predator removal in coral reef ecosystems. Marine Ecology Progress
  • Sherman, C. S., Simpfendorfer, C. A., Haque, A. B., Digel, E. D., Zubick, P., Eged, J., & Dulvy, N. K. (2022). Guitarfishes are plucked: undermanaged in global fisheries despite declining populations and high volume of unreported international trade. BioRxiv, 2022-10.
  • Shiffman, D. S., Bittick, S. J., Cashion, M. S., Colla, S. R., Coristine, L. E., Derrick, D. H., & Dulvy, N. K. (2020). Inaccurate and biased global media coverage underlies public misunderstanding of shark conservation threats and solutions. Iscience, 23(6), 101205.
  • Smith-Sebasto, N. J., & Cavern, L. (2006). Effects of pre-and posttrip activities associated with a residential environmental education experience on students' attitudes toward the environment. The Journal of Environmental Education, 37(4), 3-17.
  • Thu, H., & Minh, T. (2013). School Violence: Evidence from Young Lives in Vietnam.
  • Tsoi, K. H., Chan, S. Y., Lee, Y. C., Ip, B. H. Y., & Cheang, C. C. (2016). Shark conservation: an educational approach based on children’s knowledge and perceptions toward sharks. PloS one, 11(9), e0163406.
  • van Zinnicq Bergmann, M. P., Guttridge, T. L., Smukall, M. J., Adams, V. M., Bond, M. E., Burke, P. J., & Papastamatiou, Y. P. (2022). Using movement models and systematic conservation planning to inform marine protected area design for a multi-species predator community. Biological Conservation, 266, 109469.
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There are 62 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Tourist Behaviour and Visitor Experience, Environmental Management in Tourism
Journal Section Research Articles
Authors

Samuel Amponsah 0000-0001-5559-3139

Early Pub Date March 21, 2024
Publication Date March 31, 2024
Submission Date February 25, 2024
Acceptance Date March 21, 2024
Published in Issue Year 2024

Cite

APA Amponsah, S. (2024). Documenting perceptions and misconceptions of shark conservation among students in Ghanaian coastal communities within the context of shark tourism. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research, 10(1), 39-45. https://doi.org/10.24288/jttr.1442899
AMA Amponsah S. Documenting perceptions and misconceptions of shark conservation among students in Ghanaian coastal communities within the context of shark tourism. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research. March 2024;10(1):39-45. doi:10.24288/jttr.1442899
Chicago Amponsah, Samuel. “Documenting Perceptions and Misconceptions of Shark Conservation Among Students in Ghanaian Coastal Communities Within the Context of Shark Tourism”. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research 10, no. 1 (March 2024): 39-45. https://doi.org/10.24288/jttr.1442899.
EndNote Amponsah S (March 1, 2024) Documenting perceptions and misconceptions of shark conservation among students in Ghanaian coastal communities within the context of shark tourism. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research 10 1 39–45.
IEEE S. Amponsah, “Documenting perceptions and misconceptions of shark conservation among students in Ghanaian coastal communities within the context of shark tourism”, Journal of Tourism Theory and Research, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 39–45, 2024, doi: 10.24288/jttr.1442899.
ISNAD Amponsah, Samuel. “Documenting Perceptions and Misconceptions of Shark Conservation Among Students in Ghanaian Coastal Communities Within the Context of Shark Tourism”. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research 10/1 (March 2024), 39-45. https://doi.org/10.24288/jttr.1442899.
JAMA Amponsah S. Documenting perceptions and misconceptions of shark conservation among students in Ghanaian coastal communities within the context of shark tourism. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research. 2024;10:39–45.
MLA Amponsah, Samuel. “Documenting Perceptions and Misconceptions of Shark Conservation Among Students in Ghanaian Coastal Communities Within the Context of Shark Tourism”. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research, vol. 10, no. 1, 2024, pp. 39-45, doi:10.24288/jttr.1442899.
Vancouver Amponsah S. Documenting perceptions and misconceptions of shark conservation among students in Ghanaian coastal communities within the context of shark tourism. Journal of Tourism Theory and Research. 2024;10(1):39-45.