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Ecotourism and mangrove conservation in Southeast Asia: Current trends and perspectives

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 14:52 authored by Austin Blanton, Ewane Basil Ewane, Freddie McTavish, Michael S Watt, Kerrylee Rogers, Redeat Daneil, Irene Vizcaino, Ana Novo Gomez, Pavithra SPitumpe Arachchige, Shalini AL King, G APabodha Galgamuwa, Martha Lucia Palacios Peñaranda, Layla al-Musawi, Jorge F Montenegro, Eben North Broadbent, Angelica Maria Almeyda Zambrano, Andrew T Hudak, Kanokporn Swangjang, Luisa Fernanda Valasquez-Camacho, Jaime Hening Polania Vorenberg, Shruthi Srinivasan, Meshal M Abdullah, Yassine AR Charabi, Wan Shafrina Wan Mohd Jaafar, Fazilah Musa, Frida Sidik, Talal Al-Awadhi, Tarig Ali, Willie Doaemo
Mangroves in Southeast Asia provide numerous supporting, provisioning, regulating, and cultural services that are crucial to the environment and local livelihoods since they support biodiversity conservation and climate change resilience. However, Southeast Asia mangroves face deforestation threats from the expansion of commercial aquaculture, agriculture, and urban development, along with climate change-related natural processes. Ecotourism has gained prominence as a financial incentive tool to support mangrove conservation and restoration. Through a systematic literature review approach, we examined the relationships between ecotourism and mangrove conservation in Southeast Asia based on scientific papers published from 2010 to 2022. Most of the studies were reported in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam, respectively, which were associated with the highest number of vibrant mangrove ecotourism sites and largest mangrove areas compared to the other countries of Southeast Asia. Mangrove-related ecotourism activities in the above countries mainly include boat tours, bird and wildlife watching, mangrove planting, kayaking, eating seafood, and snorkeling. The economic benefits, such as an increase in income associated with mangrove ecotourism, have stimulated infrastructural development in ecotourism destinations. Local communities benefited from increased access to social amenities such as clean water, electricity, transportation networks, schools, and health services that are intended to make destinations more attractive to tourists. Economic benefits from mangrove ecotourism motivated the implementation of several community-based mangrove conservation and restoration initiatives, which attracted international financial incentives and public-private partnerships. Since mangroves are mostly located on the land occupied by indigenous people and local communities, ensuring respect for their land rights and equity in economic benefit sharing may increase their intrinsic motivation and participation in mangrove restoration and conservation initiatives. Remote sensing tools for mangrove monitoring, evaluation, and reporting, and integrated education and awareness campaigns can ensure the long-term conservation of mangroves while sustaining ecotourism's economic infrastructure and social amenities benefits.

Funding

U.S. Forest Service (2023/0546/UB/DFinA/DFSMS/FO/FIN/AA)

History

Journal title

Journal of Environmental Management

Volume

365

Language

English

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