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Elephants
The safari business in Africa and Asia has stopped due to the coronavirus outbreak. What is surprising are the domino effects of this economic catastrophe and the ultimate impact they will have on wildlife. (Photo: Jay Roode/iStock)

A Tourism Lull May Be Good for Animals鈥攂ut Not for Long

The economic catastrophe resulting from COVID-19 will have surprising and lasting impacts鈥攇ood and bad鈥攐n endangered wildlife

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Elephants
(Photo: Jay Roode/iStock)

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Stanza Mbanga Molaodi had big plans this spring. On May 17, the owner of 听颈苍 Botswana was due to accompany six Italian clients into Chobe National Park, home to a third of the continent鈥檚 600,000 elephants. From its base camp in the bush, the group would go on game drives, day-trip to Victoria Falls, and enjoy cocktails and crocodile-watchingon sunset cruises up the Chobe River. The gang would then relocate to the park鈥檚 semiarid Savuti region, a landscape of baobab trees and rocky outcrops听where dense herds of zebra and buffalo congregate at watering holes and try not to get picked off by the Savuti lionpride. Next up would be the Khwai Community Area, where indigenous bushmen would guide the Italians on walking safaris and take them paddling down the Khwai River in traditional mokoro canoes. The 12-day adventure would end with a birding extravaganza in the Okavango Delta, a Unesco听World Heritage site. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a beautiful place to end a safari,鈥 Molaodi told me, sounding almost emotional.

But the trip was not to be.

Frightened听by the coronavirus, the Italians canceled. All of Molaodi鈥檚 clients听have canceled or postponed. When I reached him by phone recently, he was holed up at home with his family in Kasane, fretting. On the day we spoke, the Botswana Defense Force ordered all troops on leave or off duty to return to their posts immediately, and Molaodi predicted a military-enforced lockdown, not unlike what neighboring South Africa had announced that same day. Molaodi seemed to be speaking for Africa鈥檚 entire听$40 billion wildlife-tourism industry when he confessed, 鈥淲e are all retrenching. Everyone is panicked.鈥澨

Simply put, the safari business in Africa and Asia has stopped. Completely. Maybe that鈥檚 not surprising at this point in the pandemic. Between flight cancelations, national lockdowns, border closures, emergency visa restrictions, and required quarantine upon entry, clients fearless enough to travel couldn鈥檛 reach their destinations if they wanted to. Even if they could, in some countries they鈥檇 be sorely disappointed. India has shuttered all of its tiger reserves and national parks. Congo has closed Virunga National Park, fearing that its famous mountain gorillas could contract COVID-19听from humans. Gabon, deeply scarred from losing 15,000 lowland gorillas in a 1995 Ebola outbreak, has likewise halted all ape tours.听

鈥淧oaching will increase,鈥 De Sibi insists. 鈥淧eople who are jobless must find money or food.鈥

What is surprising are the domino effects of this economic catastrophe and the ultimate impact they will have on wildlife. Starting in April, Molaodi鈥檚 six staff members will receive half their normal salary, but for May and beyond, all bets are off. Roberto de Sibi, owner of Savannah Explorers in Tanzania, had already placed 17 of his 45 employees on half salary when we spoke (I found him under 14-day quarantine in Milan, where he鈥檇 fled to be near his 82-year-old father, having caught the last flight from Tanzania to Italy). Neither Molaodi nor De听Sibi听would be paying anything to the many freelance听drivers and guides they hire during busy periods. Molaodi wouldn鈥檛 be paying the bushmen to take clients paddling, and De Sibi wouldn鈥檛 be paying Dadoga tribesmen to show his clients how to melt metal to make knives. Their clients wouldn鈥檛 be donating solar lanterns to villages or otherwise leaving generous contributions.听

Crucially, neither operator would be ponying up the various fees required by parks and community conservation areas for tourist entry, guide entry, vehicle entry, and overnight stays. Large percentages of such fees go to local communities for development projects and conservation measures, like funding anti-poaching scouts. Ninety percent of Zambia鈥檚 more than 1,000 scouts come from its communities and are paid from tourism fees. In Namibia, tourism fees pay for the country鈥檚 600 game guards and support more than 6,000 families.听

With rampant unemployment, unpaid game guards, and fewer tourists in the bush to report suspicious activity, it鈥檚 just a matter of time before wildlife gets hammered. 鈥Poaching will increase,鈥 De Sibi听颈苍sists. 鈥淧eople who are jobless must find money or food.鈥澨

Everyone I spoke with concurred on this point. 鈥淥ne of the biggest fears is that, if scouts can鈥檛 be paid, I can foresee people poaching,鈥 says Maxi Louis, director of the Namibian Association of听Community Based Natural Resources Management Support Organizations. 鈥淧overty will drive people.鈥 Louis also anticipates that local tolerance for crop-raiding herbivores and livestock-killing predators, both common in villages near protected areas, will plummet. 鈥淭here will be no scouts to manage human-animal conflict听and no funds to compensate for lost livestock,鈥 she says, expecting a spike in retaliatory killings听of troublesome wildlife.

In a 2012 study, ecologist Ralf Buckley of听Griffith University in Australia found that most of the more than 1,400 species listed as threatened by the International Union for听Conservation of Nature depend on tourism for their survival, including iconic species like lions, elephants, and rhinos. 鈥淢any park听agencies worldwide now rely heavily on tourism for routine operational funding, more than 50 percent in some cases,鈥 the study reported. 鈥淭his puts rare mammals at a new risk, from downturns in tourism driven by external socioeconomic factors.鈥澨

Given the magnitude of this potential biodiversity implosion, mentioning a silver lining might seem frivolous. But there is one. Tourism is a double-edged sword. It funds conservation, yes, but too much of it can disturb breeding patterns, feeding habits, and migratory movement. It can pollute landscapes and destroy habitat. 鈥淭his travel hiatus of several months will give a chance for resilient natural environments to recover from the stress inflicted by tourism,鈥 says Frederic Dimanche, director of the Ted Rogers School of Hospitality and Tourism Management at Ryerson University in Toronto. (While Dimanche鈥檚 prediction is warranted, many other听reports on social media of wildlife thriving as a result of quarantines .) If the animals can manage to survive, the pandemic might be an opportunity to improve wildlife tourism. 鈥淒estinations and tourism operators everywhere have a unique chance to restart a tourism that will be better planned, better managed, one that will be sustainable, with stronger policies,鈥 Dimanche says.听

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