Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspective

A prerequisite for ecotourism development is the presence of natural environments, normally exhibited in protected areas, which serve as ecotourism venues. Little attention has been given to Mediterranean islands in terms of ecotourism. In this paper, nine islands in the central Mediterranean region...

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Main Authors: Karl Agius, Nadia Theuma, Alan Deidun, Liberato Camilleri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Prince Edward Island 2019-11-01
Series:Island Studies Journal
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-f6b276a757ba4efbbc88c66bad3424c82020-11-25T03:20:52ZengUniversity of Prince Edward IslandIsland Studies Journal1715-25931715-25932019-11-0114211513610.24043/isj.97Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspectiveKarl Agius0Nadia Theuma1Alan Deidun2Liberato Camilleri3Institute for Tourism, Travel and Culture, University of Malta, MaltaInstitute for Tourism, Travel and Culture, University of Malta, MaltaDepartment of Geosciences, University of Malta, MaltaDepartment of Statistics & Operations Research, University of Malta, MaltaA prerequisite for ecotourism development is the presence of natural environments, normally exhibited in protected areas, which serve as ecotourism venues. Little attention has been given to Mediterranean islands in terms of ecotourism. In this paper, nine islands in the central Mediterranean region were studied through a case study approach to investigate their potential as ecotourism destinations, taking into account the presence of protected areas and related aspects, including spatial dimensions and quality, to fulfil ecotourists. Larger islands with higher population densities were found to experience habitat fragmentation, and protected areas were thus in some cases relatively small and dispersed. In contrast, smaller, less populated islands were found to be more ideal ecotourism destinations due to limited anthropogenic impact and their capacity to fulfil the expectations of the ‘true specialists’, also known as ‘hard ecotourists’. Quality of ecotourism venues was found to affect ecotourist satisfaction. Ideal ecotourism sites on heavily impacted islands were found on the island periphery, in coastal and marine locations, with marine ecotourism serving as the ideal ecotourism product on such islands.central mediterraneanecotourismhabitat fragmentationislandsprotected areastourism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karl Agius
Nadia Theuma
Alan Deidun
Liberato Camilleri
spellingShingle Karl Agius
Nadia Theuma
Alan Deidun
Liberato Camilleri
Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspective
Island Studies Journal
central mediterranean
ecotourism
habitat fragmentation
islands
protected areas
tourism
author_facet Karl Agius
Nadia Theuma
Alan Deidun
Liberato Camilleri
author_sort Karl Agius
title Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspective
title_short Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspective
title_full Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspective
title_fullStr Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspective
title_full_unstemmed Small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central Mediterranean perspective
title_sort small islands as ecotourism destinations: a central mediterranean perspective
publisher University of Prince Edward Island
series Island Studies Journal
issn 1715-2593
1715-2593
publishDate 2019-11-01
description A prerequisite for ecotourism development is the presence of natural environments, normally exhibited in protected areas, which serve as ecotourism venues. Little attention has been given to Mediterranean islands in terms of ecotourism. In this paper, nine islands in the central Mediterranean region were studied through a case study approach to investigate their potential as ecotourism destinations, taking into account the presence of protected areas and related aspects, including spatial dimensions and quality, to fulfil ecotourists. Larger islands with higher population densities were found to experience habitat fragmentation, and protected areas were thus in some cases relatively small and dispersed. In contrast, smaller, less populated islands were found to be more ideal ecotourism destinations due to limited anthropogenic impact and their capacity to fulfil the expectations of the ‘true specialists’, also known as ‘hard ecotourists’. Quality of ecotourism venues was found to affect ecotourist satisfaction. Ideal ecotourism sites on heavily impacted islands were found on the island periphery, in coastal and marine locations, with marine ecotourism serving as the ideal ecotourism product on such islands.
topic central mediterranean
ecotourism
habitat fragmentation
islands
protected areas
tourism
work_keys_str_mv AT karlagius smallislandsasecotourismdestinationsacentralmediterraneanperspective
AT nadiatheuma smallislandsasecotourismdestinationsacentralmediterraneanperspective
AT alandeidun smallislandsasecotourismdestinationsacentralmediterraneanperspective
AT liberatocamilleri smallislandsasecotourismdestinationsacentralmediterraneanperspective
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