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Impacts of Tourism Maintained by UNEP  
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As one of the world's largest industries and one of its fastest growing economic sectors, tourism has a multitude of impacts, both positive and negative, on people's lives and on the environment. The quality of the environment, both natural and man-made, is essential to tourism. However, tourism's relationship with the environment is complex. It involves many activities that can have adverse environmental effects. Negative impacts from tourism will arise when the level of visitor use is superior to the environment's ability to cope with this use.

 

Uncontrolled coastal tourism development poses potential threats to many natural areas around the world as it can put enormous pressure on a very narrow area. Many of these impacts are linked with the construction of general infrastructure such as roads and airports, and of tourism facilities, including resorts, hotels, restaurants, shops, golf courses and marinas. Such developments often lead to impacts such as soil erosion, increased pollution, waste discharges into the sea, natural habitat loss and associated loss in biodiversity and increased pressure on endangered species. This is particularly true for some of the world's most ecologically fragile areas such as wetlands, mangroves, coral reefs and sea grass beds. Furthermore, it often puts a strain on water resources, and it can force local populations to compete for the use of critical resources such as fish. By involving many activities that can have adverse environmental effects tourism has the potential to gradually destroy the environmental resources on which it depends. Usually these effects are dynamic and often interactive.

 

Picture courtesy of NOAA.

On the other hand, tourism has the potential to create beneficial effects on the environment by contributing to environmental protection and conservation. It is a way to raise awareness of environmental values and it can serve as a tool to finance protection of natural areas and increase their economic importance.

 
 
 
 
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Dr. Ellen K. Rudolph
Photograph1159193268945_DrEllen_96dpi_.jpg
DescriptionI care deeply about our natural world. In my work as an international conservation photographer and educator I seek to impart to others a sense of the fragility of our world and the necessity for humans to protect our Earth from further destructive aspects of technology and unbridled growth. I am, in that regard, a fervent student of physicist David Bohm's wholeness and implicate order, which offers promising metaphors for reality as an interdependent whole. Western science interprets life as a series of separate problems with separate solutions. Newtonian mechanics is not some [partial] explanation of the way things work -- according to western science it is a [complete] explanation, so much so that all that is left for science is to now fill in a few remaining blanks. We are, in fact, so used to this idea by now that we forget how new a thought this is in human history. But this mechanistic thinking with its 'clockwork' metaphors may not only not be correct; it may distort our perceptions of reality. Ancient holistic ideas decry the cutting up of Nature into manageable, independent parts that can be understood individually and so do I. It has driven me towards an ever-increasing awareness of the need for a fundamental change in our collective perspective from the fragmentary essence of western scientific views to one that recognizes and celebrates the inherent interdependencies of living systems. - Dr. Ellen K. Rudolph
Keywords NATURE; TRAVEL; CONSERVATION; PHOTOGRAPHY; PHOTOJOURNALISM
Geography Keywords USA; COSTA RICA; ECUADOR; SURINAME; GUYANA; FRANCE; PROVENCE; SINGAPORE; SOUTH AFRICA; NAMIBIA; AUSTRALIAN CONTINENT
Organization Freelance
PositionPresident
Address
10900 Oakhurst Rd
Largo   Florida
USA   33774
Telephone+1 727 517 2767
Email
Homepagehttp://www.drellenrudolph.com
Related to TopicsMembers (members); Impacts of Tourism (2609); Sea turtles (19426); Birds (19538); Negative impacts; enclave tourism and other effects (19666); Positive effects (19670); Coral reefs (19356); Sand dunes and beaches (19338); Pollution and Waste (17936); Socio cultural aspects (19673); Issues in Recreation and Tourism (2314); Awareness Building (2623); Research (19702); Sustainable Tourism (2615); Types of Recreation and Tourism (2624); Ecotourism (2629); Ecosystem Vitality and Biodiversity (2572); Coastal Urbanisation (2520); Destruction of Habitats (2519); Awareness Building (2577); Threats to Habitats (2559)
  
979 Topics - 5229 Related Knowledge - 11257 Members - 47 Editors
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