Managing the activities of commercial wildlife\ud viewing tends to involve either restricting the number of industry participants and/or regulating the activities or industry participants. We report on operator compliance with regulations\ud regarding humans swimming with free-ranging bottlenose dolphins Tursiops\ud sp.) in Port Phillip Bay, Victoria, Australia. A\ud total of 128 commercial dolphin-swim trips was studied between September 1998 and April 2000. Four permit conditions were investigated: approach type, swim time, time in\ud proximity of dolphins, and presence of “fetal fold” calves. Results demonstrate noncompliance by operators to all of the\ud four permit conditions studied. Compliance with temporal\ud conditions was poorer t...
Common dolphins, Delphinus sp., are one of the marine mammal species tourism operations in New Zeala...
In the past decade, marine mammal tourism has increased dramatically in the United States. To promot...
Tourism targeting cetaceans near Kaikoura, New Zealand began in the late 1980s and five commercial o...
This article reports on operator compliance with regulations regarding humans swimming with free-ran...
Between 1998 and 2003 cetacean tourism in Australia expanded at a rate of 15 per cent per annum (IFA...
Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops spp.) are the primary target species for commercial dolphin tourism in...
Over the past two decades, considerable growth in commercial cetacean-based tourism has exposed coas...
The public desire to interact with marine mammals has resulted in the development of a billion dolla...
This report investigates whether there is a need to take a more regulated approach to the conduct of...
Nature-based tourism targeting cetaceans is a billion dollar industry that continues to grow. Theref...
This study investigated Burrunan dolphin responses to dolphin-swim tour vessels across two time peri...
AbstractThis study investigated Burrunan dolphin responses to dolphin-swim tour vessels across two t...
The small, genetically distinct population of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) in...
Common dolphins, Delphinus sp., are one of the marine mammal species tourism operations in New Zeala...
We studied interactions between tourists and free-ranging bottlenose dolphins in an artificial feedi...
Common dolphins, Delphinus sp., are one of the marine mammal species tourism operations in New Zeala...
In the past decade, marine mammal tourism has increased dramatically in the United States. To promot...
Tourism targeting cetaceans near Kaikoura, New Zealand began in the late 1980s and five commercial o...
This article reports on operator compliance with regulations regarding humans swimming with free-ran...
Between 1998 and 2003 cetacean tourism in Australia expanded at a rate of 15 per cent per annum (IFA...
Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops spp.) are the primary target species for commercial dolphin tourism in...
Over the past two decades, considerable growth in commercial cetacean-based tourism has exposed coas...
The public desire to interact with marine mammals has resulted in the development of a billion dolla...
This report investigates whether there is a need to take a more regulated approach to the conduct of...
Nature-based tourism targeting cetaceans is a billion dollar industry that continues to grow. Theref...
This study investigated Burrunan dolphin responses to dolphin-swim tour vessels across two time peri...
AbstractThis study investigated Burrunan dolphin responses to dolphin-swim tour vessels across two t...
The small, genetically distinct population of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) in...
Common dolphins, Delphinus sp., are one of the marine mammal species tourism operations in New Zeala...
We studied interactions between tourists and free-ranging bottlenose dolphins in an artificial feedi...
Common dolphins, Delphinus sp., are one of the marine mammal species tourism operations in New Zeala...
In the past decade, marine mammal tourism has increased dramatically in the United States. To promot...
Tourism targeting cetaceans near Kaikoura, New Zealand began in the late 1980s and five commercial o...