4.7 Article

Effects of COVID-19 pandemic restrictions on coral reef fishes at eco-tourism sites in Bora-Bora, French Polynesia

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 170, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2021.105451

Keywords

COVID-19; Eco-tourism sites; Fishes; Coral reef; Future management; Human activities

Funding

  1. Fondation de France [2019-08602]
  2. LabEx CORAIL [ANR-19-CE34-0006-Manini, ANR-19-CE14-0010-SENSO]
  3. Bloomberg's Philanthropy

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The study found that the global lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on reef fish, with a rapid increase in fish density in French Polynesia due to the suspension of marine-based tourism activities. The increase in fish density was temporary and returned to prelockdown levels, indicating the short-term effect of human activities on fish communities. These findings emphasize the need for further research on the environmental impacts of ecotourism.
The COVID-19 pandemic led to a global lockdown in mid-2020, leading to a rapid decline in international travel and tourism. In French Polynesia, marine-based tourism activities ceased in March 2020 with the suspension of international flights (i.e., 45 days - between 20th March and 04th May 2020), slowly restarting between May-July as domestic and international visitors returned. The impacts of this rapid change in human activity at reef tourism sites on associated reef fishes was examined at Bora-Bora Island through underwater surveys of five control and nine eco-tourism sites. Our results showed that fish density significantly increased from March to May (i.e., the overall density of fishes increased by 143% and harvested species by 215%), but returned to prelockdown levels by August 2020. At the usually busy eco-tourism sites, fish diversity, notably of piscivores, omnivores, and benthic feeders, was higher in the absence of tourists. The impact observed is almost certainly related to short term changes in fish behavior, as any density fluctuations at the population level are unlikely to have happened over such a short time frame. Overall, these findings highlight the influence of human activities on fish communities and underline the need for further research to evaluate the environmental impacts of ecotourism.

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