霊長類研究 Supplement
The 39th Congress Primate Society of Japan
会議情報

口頭発表
The impact of tourist visits on mountain gorilla behavior in Uganda: proximity to tourists and risk of extinction
Raquel COSTAValeria ROMANOAndre PEREIRAJordan D. A. HartAndrew MacIntoshMichael HUFFMANRafaela SAYURIGladys KALEMA-ZIKUSOKAFred BERCOVITCHMasaki TOMONAGAMisato HAYASHI
著者情報
会議録・要旨集 フリー

p. 33

詳細
抄録

Tourism can play a significant role in the conservation of mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei) by financing the protection of their habitat, but few systematic studies have focused on the impacts of tourist presence on gorilla behavior. We assessed stress-coping mechanisms (prosocial behaviors), behavioral indicators of stress (self-scratching), direct interactions with humans (agonistic, neutral and avoidance behaviors), and changes in social cohesion patterns (time spent with and number of individuals in close association), in the presence and absence of tourist groups visiting one group of mountain gorillas living in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda. Generalized linear mixed models and social network analysis were used to analyse differences in gorilla behavior as a function of (a) presence vs. absence of tourists and (b) proximity to tourists (<3 m vs >3 m). Contrary to guidelines, tourists spent 60% of their viewing time within 3 m of the gorillas. During tourist visits, gorillas increased time spent in prosocial behavior and rates of self-scratching and human-directed behavior, increasing also social cohesion. When tourists approached gorillas within 3 m, prosocial behavior, human-directed behavior, and social cohesion increased, but only adult males increased self-scratching rates. We conclude that tourists are influencing gorilla behavior and we recommend following and enforcing the IUCN guidelines by keeping a minimum 7 m distance when viewing gorillas.

著者関連情報
© 2023 by Primate Society of Japan
前の記事 次の記事
feedback
Top