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Este capítulo aborda el sobreturismo como un medio para analizar los impactos y límites del desarrollo turístico capitalista tardío en las áreas naturales protegidas de las Islas Galápagos y sus alrededores. El análisis de contenido cualitativo apunta hacia tres temas emergentes: (i) rápida diversificación de la economía turística terrestre de las Galápagos; (ii) ambivalencia política hacia la gobernanza del crecimiento del turismo y la lógica de la conservación; y (iii) cambios radicales en los patrones de representación en línea de las Galápagos como destino turístico que ocurren a través de la marca y la publicidad. Finalmente, se abre una discusión sobre los resultados previsibles de las narrativas de saturación turística implantadas mucho más allá de las localidades metropolitanas y los puntos calientes del turismo urbano europeo.
Este informe del Pacto Mundial de las Naciones Unidas, elaborado en consulta con más de 300 partes interesadas, identificó cinco puntos de inflexión para un océano saludable y productivo que representan un conjunto de objetivos tangibles para abordar los desafíos de la sostenibilidad de los océanos.
Este artículo de Marine Insight describe los diferentes tipos de contaminación causados por los barcos, incluidos: contaminación del agua de lastre, contaminación del aire, contaminación acústica, contaminación de aguas grises, contaminación de aguas negras/aguas residuales, contaminación química, contaminación por petróleo/aceite de sentina y contaminación por residuos sólidos.
The primary goal of this study is to investigate the present coastal management plans for blue carbon ecosystem management strategies using content analysis of the local plans of select municipalities in the Philippines. The analysis generated eight (8) clusters based on keywords focusing on mangrove and seagrass ecosystems, namely: ecological profile, ecosystem services, carbon sequestration, tourism, natural threats, anthropogenic threats, laws, policies, & ordinances, and management activities. The results of this study can serve as a benchmark for local policy-makers in updating their present management plans particularly in branching their focus on integrated management of seagrass ecosystems and advancing technical capacity and knowledge on blue carbon ecosystems.
This case study analyses the role of environmental NGOs in managing sustainable coastal and marine tourism on Santa Maria island in the Azores.
This report offers best practices and case studies for concessions in protected areas in Latin America.
The Nature Conservancy’s Blue Bonds for Conservation model helps governments unlock funding for conservation—and could benefit millions of people in coastal regions. Demonstrated by successful projects in Barbados, Belize and the Seychelles. The Blue Bonds strategy combines conservation finance with TNC’s science and marine planning expertise to help governments unlock funds at a scale that delivers against their conservation goals while also supporting the well-being of their communities and economies. The strategy is aligned with global goals to protect 30% of the world’s ocean, lands and freshwater by 2030.
This report surveyed 30 tourism operators globally using the IUCN NbS Global Standard to assess how NbS are enabling destinations to take proactive climate action. The paper outlined 5 Principles for Effective Nature-based Solutions in the Tourism Sector with practical guidelines, action steps, and case studies highlighting action taken by industry leaders. With over 17 affiliate partners joining to amplify the important message behind the white paper, the research has been well-received by an industry that to date has little practical guidance for increasing investment in NbS at scale. Blue tourism operators in coastal destinations and the NbS they are using were heavily featured in this report.
This WWF tool provides a standardized evaluation approach to ensure conservation linkages and to set thematic and geographic priorities for engagement. This framework includes a conservation framework; tourism readiness, potential and status; conservation travel potential; and WWF country readiness and funding potential.
This briefing focuses on what we know about the short-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on our environment, approximately six months after large parts of the world went into some degree of lockdown. It considers what can be learnt from these effects and how they might help shape decision-making in the future.