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Tourism's Three Main Impact Areas
Negative impacts from tourism occur when the
level of visitor use is greater than the environment's ability
to cope with this use within the acceptable limits of change.
Uncontrolled conventional tourism poses potential threats to many
natural areas around the world. It can put enormous pressure on
an area and lead to impacts such as soil erosion, increased pollution,
discharges into the sea, natural habitat loss, increased pressure
on endangered species and heightened vulnerability to forest fires.
It often puts a strain on water resources, and it can force local
populations to compete for the use of critical resources.
Depletion
of Natural Resources
Tourism development can put pressure on natural
resources when it increases consumption in areas where resources
are already scarce.
Water resources
Water, and especially fresh water, is one of
the most critical natural resources. The tourism industry generally
overuses water resources for hotels, swimming pools, golf courses
and personal use of water by tourists. This can result in water
shortages and degradation of water supplies, as well as generating
a greater volume of waste water..
In dryer regions like the Mediterranean, the issue of water scarcity
is of particular concern. Because of the hot climate and the tendency
of tourists to consume more water when on holiday than they do
at home, the amount used can run up to 440 liters a day. This
is almost double what the inhabitants of an average Spanish city
use.
Golf course maintenance can also
deplete fresh water resources. In recent years golf tourism has
increased in popularity and the number of golf courses has grown
rapidly. Golf courses require an enormous amount of water every
day and, as with other causes of excessive extraction of water,
this can result in water scarcity. If the water comes from wells,
overpumping can cause saline intrusion into groundwater. Golf
resorts are more and more often situated in or near protected
areas or areas where resources are limited, exacerbating their
impacts.
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An average golf course in a tropical
country such as Thailand needs 1500kg of chemical fertilizers,
pesticides and herbicides per year and uses as much water
as 60,000 rural villagers.
Source: Tourism
Concern
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Local resources
Tourism can create great pressure
on local resources like energy, food, and other raw materials
that may already be in short supply. Greater extraction and transport
of these resources exacerbates the physical impacts associated
with their exploitation. Because of the seasonal character of
the industry, many destinations have ten times more inhabitants
in the high season as in the low season. A high demand is placed
upon these resources to meet the high expectations tourists often
have (proper heating, hot water, etc.).
Land degradation
Important land resources include
minerals, fossil fuels, fertile soil, forests, wetland and wildlife.
Increased construction of tourism and recreational facilities
has increased the pressure on these resources and on scenic landscapes.
Direct impact on natural resources, both renewable and nonrenewable,
in the provision of tourist facilities can be caused by the use
of land for accommodation and other infrastructure provision,
and the use of building materials.
Forests often suffer negative impacts
of tourism in the form of deforestation caused by fuel wood collection
and land clearing. For example, one trekking tourist in Nepal
- and area already suffering the effects of deforestation - can
use four to five kilograms of wood a day.
Tourism can cause the same
forms of pollution as any other industry: air emissions, noise,
solid waste and littering, releases of sewage, oil and chemicals,
even architectural/visual pollution.
Air pollution and noise
Transport by air, road, and rail
is continuously increasing in response to the rising number of
tourists and their greater mobility. To give an indication, the
ICAO reported
that the number of international air passengers worldwide rose
from 88 million in 1972 to 344 million in 1994. One consequence
of this increase in air transport is that tourism now accounts
for more than 60% of air travel and is therefore responsible for
an important share of air emissions. One study estimated that
a single transatlantic return flight emits almost half the CO2
emissions produced by all other sources (lighting, heating, car
use, etc.) consumed by an average person yearly. (Mayer Hillman,
Town & Country Planning magazine, September 1996. Source: MFOE
).
Transport emissions and emissions
from energy production and use are linked to acid rain, global
warming and photochemical pollution. Air pollution from tourist
transportation has impacts on the global level, especially from
carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions related to transportation energy
use. And it can contribute to severe local air pollution. Some
of these impacts are quite specific to tourist activities. For
example, especially in very hot or cold countries, tour buses
often leave their motors running for hours while the tourists
go out for an excursion because they want to return to a comfortably
air-conditioned bus.
Noise pollution from airplanes,
cars, and buses, as well as recreational vehicles such as snowmobiles
and jet skis, is an ever-growing problem of modern life. In
addition to causing annoyance, stress, and even hearing loss
for it humans, it causes distress to wildlife, especially in
sensitive areas. For instance, noise generated by snowmobiles
can cause animals to alter their natural activity patterns.
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In winter 2000, 76,271 people
entered Yellowstone National Park on snowmobiles, outnumbering
the 40,727 visitors who came in cars, 10,779 in snowcoaches
and 512 on skis. A survey of snowmobile impacts on natural
sounds at Yellowstone found that snowmobile noise could
be heard 70% of the time at 11 of 13 sample sites, and
90% of the time at 8 sites. At the Old Faithful geyser,
snowmobiles could be heard 100% of the time during the
daytime period studied. Snowmobile noise drowned out
even the sound of the geyser erupting.
Source: Idahonews and
Yahoo
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Solid waste and littering
In
areas with high concentrations of tourist activities and appealing
natural attractions, waste disposal is a serious problem and
improper disposal can be a major despoiler of the natural environment
- rivers, scenic areas, and roadsides. For example, cruise ships
in the Caribbean are estimated to produce more than 70,000 tons
of waste each year. Today some
cruise lines are actively working to reduce waste-related impacts.
Solid waste and littering can degrade the physical appearance
of the water and shoreline and cause the death of marine animals.
In mountain areas, trekking tourists
generate a great deal of waste. Tourists on expedition leave
behind their garbage, oxygen cylinders and even camping equipment.
Such practices degrade the environment with all the detritus
typical of the developed world, in remote areas that have few
garbage collection or disposal facilities. Some trails in the
Peruvian Andes and in Nepal frequently visited by tourists have
been nicknamed "Coca-Cola trail" and "Toilet paper trail".
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The Wider Caribbean Region,
stretching from Florida to French Guiana, receives 63,000
port calls from ships each year, and they generate 82,000
tons of garbage. About 77% of all ship waste comes from
cruise vessels. The average cruise ship carries 600
crew members and 1,400 passengers. On average, passengers
on a cruise ship each account for 3.5 kilograms of garbage
daily - compared with the 0.8 kilograms each generated
by the less well-endowed folk on shore.
Source: Our
Planet, UNEP magazine for environmentally sustainable
development, volume 10, no. 3, 1999
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Sewage
Construction
of hotels, recreation and other facilities often leads to increased
sewage pollution. Wastewater has polluted seas and lakes surrounding
tourist attractions, damaging the flora and fauna. Sewage runoff
causes serious damage to coral reefs because it stimulates the
growth of algae, which cover the filter-feeding corals, hindering
their ability to survive. Changes in salinity and siltation
can have wide-ranging impacts on coastal environments. And sewage
pollution can threaten the health of humans and animals.
Aesthetic Pollution
Often tourism fails to integrate
its structures with the natural features and indigenous architectural
of the destination. Large, dominating resorts of disparate design
can look out of place in any natural environment and may clash
with the indigenous structural design.
A lack of land-use planning and
building regulations in many destinations has facilitated sprawling
developments along coastlines, valleys and scenic routes. The
sprawl includes tourism facilities themselves and supporting
infrastructure such as roads, employee housing, parking, service
areas, and waste disposal.
Physical
Impacts
Attractive landscape sites, such
as sandy beaches, lakes, riversides, and mountain tops and slopes,
are often transitional zones, characterized by species-rich
ecosystems. Typical physical impacts include the degradation
of such ecosystems.
An ecosystem is a geographic
area including all the living organisms (people, plants, animals,
and microorganisms), their physical surroundings (such as soil,
water, and air), and the natural cycles that sustain them. The
ecosystems most threatened with degradation are ecologically
fragile areas such as alpine regions, rain forests, wetlands,
mangroves, coral reefs and sea grass beds. The threats to and
pressures on these ecosystems are often severe because such
places are very attractive to both tourists and developers.
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In industrial countries, mass
tourism and recreation are now fast overtaking the extractive
industries as the largest threat to mountain communities
and environments. Since 1945, visits to the 10 most
popular mountainous national parks in the United States
have increased twelve-fold. In the European Alps, tourism
now exceeds 100 million visitor-days. Every year in
the Indian Himalaya, more than 250,000 Hindu pilgrims,
25,000 trekkers, and 75 mountaineering expeditions climb
to the sacred source of the Ganges River, the Gangotri
Glacier. They deplete local forests for firewood, trample
riparian vegetation, and strew litter. Even worse, this
tourism frequently induces poorly planned, land-intensive
development.
Source: People
& the Planet
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Physical impacts are caused not only by
tourism-related land clearing and construction, but by continuing
tourist activities and long-term changes in local economies
and ecologies.
Physical impacts of tourism development
- Construction activities and infrastructure
development
The development of tourism facilities such as accommodation,
water supplies, restaurants and recreation facilities can
involve sand mining, beach and sand dune erosion, soil erosion
and extensive paving. In addition, road and airport construction
can lead to land degradation and loss of wildlife habitats
and deterioration of scenery.
In Yosemite National
Park (US), for instance, the number of roads and facilities
have been increased to keep pace with the growing visitor
numbers and to supply amenities, infrastructure and parking
lots for all these tourists. These actions have caused habitat
loss in the park and are accompanied by various forms of pollution
including air pollution from automobile emissions; the Sierra
Club has reported "smog so thick that Yosemite Valley could
not be seen from airplanes". This occasional smog is harmful
to all species and vegetation inside the Park. (Source: Trade
and Environment Database)
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Deforestation and intensified
or unsustainable use of land
Construction of ski resort accommodation and facilities
frequently requires clearing forested land. Coastal wetlands
are often drained and filled due to lack of more suitable
sites for construction of tourism facilities and infrastructure.
These activities can cause severe disturbance and erosion
of the local ecosystem, even destruction in the long term.
- Marina development
Development of marinas and breakwaters
can cause changes in currents and coastlines. Furthermore,
extraction of building materials such as sand affects coral
reefs, mangroves, and hinterland forests, leading to erosion
and destruction of habitats. In the Philippines and the
Maldives, dynamiting and mining of coral for resort building
materials has damaged fragile coral reefs and depleted the
fisheries that sustain local people and attract tourists.
Overbuilding and extensive paving of shorelines can result
in destruction of habitats and disruption of land-sea connections
(such as sea-turtle nesting spots). Coral
reefs are especially fragile marine ecosystems and are
suffering worldwide from reef-based tourism developments.
Evidence suggests a variety of impacts to coral result from
shoreline development, increased sediments in the water,
trampling by tourists and divers, ship groundings, pollution
from sewage, overfishing, and fishing with poisons and explosives
that destroy coral habitat.
Physical impacts from tourist
activities
- Trampling
Tourists using the same trail over
and over again trample the vegetation and soil, eventually
causing damage that can lead to loss of biodiversity and
other impacts. Such damage can be even more extensive when
visitors frequently stray off established trails.
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Breakage and bruising of stems
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Loss of organic matter
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Reduced plant vigor
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Reduction in soil macro porosity
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Reduced regeneration
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Decrease in air and water permeability
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Loss of ground cover
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Increase in run off
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Change in species composition
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Accelerated erosion
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Source: University
of Idaho
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- Anchoring and
other marine activities
In marine areas (around coastal waters, reefs, beach and
shoreline, offshore waters, uplands and lagoons) many tourist
activities occur in or around fragile ecosystems. Anchoring,
snorkeling, sport fishing and scuba diving, yachting, and
cruising are some of the activities that can cause direct
degradation of marine ecosystems such as coral reefs, and
subsequent impacts on coastal protection and fisheries.
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There are 109 countries with
coral reefs. In 90 of them reefs are being damaged by
cruise ship anchors and sewage, by tourists breaking
off chunks of coral, and by commercial harvesting for
sale to tourists. One study of a cruise ship anchor
dropped in a coral reef for one day found an area about
half the size of a football field completely destroyed,
and half again as much covered by rubble that died later.
It was estimated that coral recovery would take fifty
years.
Source: Ocean
Planet
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- Alteration of
ecosystems by tourist activities
Habitat can be degraded by tourism leisure activities. For
example, wildlife viewing can bring about stress for the
animals and alter their natural behavior when tourists come
too close. Safaris and wildlife watching activities have
a degrading effect on habitat as they often are accompanied
by the noise and commotion created by tourists as they chase
wild animals in their trucks and aircraft. This puts high
pressure on animal habits and behaviors and tends to bring
about behavioral changes. In some cases, as in Kenya, it
has led to animals becoming so disturbed that at times they
neglect their young or fail to mate.
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