top

perc

HOME

About PERC

Events

Fellowships

News

PERC Reports

Private Solutions

Publications

Research

Student Programs

Support PERC

Connect to PERC

Search

line

contact

Green Tea

 

PERC Reports: Volume 17,
No.1, Winter 1999 

Greener Pastures

Send to FriendE-mail   Printer Friendly Print

Turtle Tourism

v[ Full text in PDF ]

More Greener Pastures
Guerillas Go Organic
Keeping It Clean
Forest - Saving Fashions
Wilderness By Reservation
Recipe For Sludge
Along Brazil's Atlantic coast, local people patrol 620 miles of beaches to protect five endangered species of sea turtle. By protecting the turtles, they are also protecting an important source of income based on ecotourism. One local man said, "Turtles have become a big part of my life. If I or any other fisherman sees a turtle sick on the shore, we stop and try to help it."

For the past 18 years a pioneering project called Tamar has re-educated fishermen, guided a growing tourist industry, and helped release 2.8 million turtle hatchlings into the sea. Begun by a university student who witnessed poachers slaughtering the huge sea turtles on the beach, the project has won international recognition for its conservation.

To help protect the giant creatures, 400 local people are employed to monitor 2-mile-long sections of the beach during nesting season. Eggs that are at risk to predators are transferred to a hatchery.

The protected turtle habitat has attracted a growing number of tourists. At Tamar headquarters in Praia de Forte, more than 300,000 people tour the museum and visitors' center each year. Local people sell an array of handicrafts and turtle paraphernalia that are popular with the tourists and profitable for the craftsmen. Since the Tamar project began, fifteen low-rise, turtle-friendly hotels and numerous restaurants have been built along the coastline providing hundreds of jobs to local people.

Balancing ecotourism with conservation has been a tricky business at times, but so far both the people and the endangered turtles have reaped the benefits.

Miami Herald
PERC Reports Archives:

Winter 1999
Summary


2012
  No.1
2011
  No.1  No.2  No.3
2010
  No.1  No.2  No.3
2009
  No.1  No.2  No.3
2008
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2007
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2006
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2005
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2004
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2003
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2002
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2001
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2000
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4

[ search all ]

 

Recycling

What's wrong with our federal lands?

National TV Broadcasting and the rise of the regulatory state

Not a walk in the park