Habituation of wildlife to ecotourism: A COVID-19 lockdown experiment in Corcovado National Park, Costa Rica

  • Juan C. Cruz-Díaz , 1,2 ,
  • Max Villalobos 2 ,
  • Víctor H. Montalvo 3 ,
  • Carolina Sáenz-Bolaños 3 ,
  • Todd K. Fuller 1 ,
  • Eduardo Carrillo 3
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  • 1. Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
  • 2. Field Conservation Programs, Namá Conservation, Heredia, Costa Rica
  • 3. Programa Jaguar (Jaguar Reasearch Program), Instituto Internacional en Conservación y Manejo de Vida Silvestre, Universidad Nacional, Apdo, Heredia, Costa Rica
carloscruz@idehs.org and carloscruz@namaconservation.org

Received date: 26 Nov 2023

Revised date: 17 Apr 2024

Accepted date: 25 Apr 2024

Copyright

2024 2024 The Authors. Wildlife Letters published by Northeast Forestry University and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.

Abstract

Corcovado National Park (CNP) in Costa Rica is an important destination for ecotourism. However, the effects of increasing human visitation on wildlife needed evaluation and the global COVID-19 pandemic lockdown provided a scenario to test the effects of tourist activity on wildlife presence and activity. We performed a camera trap survey initiated during the COVID-19 lockdown and continuing when tourism resumed (Oct 2020–May 2021). We deployed camera traps on walking trails, including those that remained closed to tourists at all times (control) and those open to tourists after the lockdown was lifted (experimental). With an effort of 2312 trap nights, we assessed the photo rates and diel activity patterns of humans, 11 other species of mammals, and two species of birds. Our results suggest that wildlife species were already habituated to tourists in this area, and thus their behavior and activity did not change after the lockdown was lifted.

Cite this article

Juan C. Cruz-Díaz , Max Villalobos , Víctor H. Montalvo , Carolina Sáenz-Bolaños , Todd K. Fuller , Eduardo Carrillo . Habituation of wildlife to ecotourism: A COVID-19 lockdown experiment in Corcovado National Park, Costa Rica[J]. Wildlife Letters, 2024 , 2(1) : 5 -16 . DOI: 10.1002/wll2.12032

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