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Preparing for climate change: recognising its early impacts through the perceptions of dive tourists and dive operators in the Egyptian Red Sea
Authors:Nadine A Marshall  Paul A Marshall  Ameer Abdulla  Tony Rouphael  Amr Ali
Institution:1. CSIRO, Climate Adaptation Flagship and Ecosystems Sciences , Townsville, Australia nadine.marshall@csiro.au;3. Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and IUCN Working Group on Climate Change and Coral Reefs , Townsville, Australia;4. IUCN, Marine Biodiversity and Conservation Science , Malaga, Spain;5. IUCN, Marine Biodiversity and Conservation Science , Perth, Australia;6. HEPCA , Hurghada, Egypt
Abstract:Climate change has the potential to permanently alter the attraction of many destinations and substantially impact the benefits derived from tourism. These impacts can be reduced if vulnerability to climate change is understood and operators take steps to adapt. Some of the more immediate and manageable impacts are likely to result from changes in tourist perceptions and attitudes towards climate change. We test for early impacts in the Red Sea region and for the awareness of tourism operators. We interviewed 150 tourists and 35 operators. Our data suggest that changes in tourist awareness are already apparent; yet, operators ascribe only a moderate level of environmental and climate awareness to them. This ‘perception gap’ increases the vulnerability of dive operators.
Keywords:climate change  adaptive capacity  climate vulnerability  climate risk  attitudinal change  climate adaptation planning
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