Willingness to engage in marine conservation through eDNA-informed citizen science on whale-watching platforms
Eleonora Barbaccia, Lauren Kelly Rodriguez, Belén García Ovide, Mario Gabualdi, Enrico Villa, Maddalena Jahoda, Caterina Lanfredi, Marianne Helene Rasmussen, Michael Traugott, Bettina Thalinger, Arianna Azzellino

TL;DR
This study shows that adding eDNA sampling and citizen science to whale-watching tours can boost public engagement in marine conservation.
Contribution
The novel approach combines eDNA sampling with citizen science in whale-watching to promote marine conservation and public awareness.
Findings
Environmental awareness and education are strong predictors of willingness to pay for conservation.
Younger, highly educated individuals with whale-watching experience are more likely to support citizen science.
eDNA-based citizen science increases awareness and personal responsibility for marine protection.
Abstract
Marine biodiversity faces challenges due to climate change, pollution, and human activities. Conservation efforts are often constrained by limited resources and public disengagement. This study evaluates the potential benefits of incorporating environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling and citizen science into whale-watching tours to raise environmental awareness and promote marine conservation. A Likert-scale questionnaire evaluating attitudes, knowledge, and willingness to contribute to conservation through financial support, behavioral changes, and volunteering was administered to 224 participants across the Pelagos Sanctuary (Italy), the Azores (Portugal), and Skjálfandi Bay (Iceland). Environmental awareness, interest in environmental DNA (eDNA), and higher education levels were identified as significant predictors of willingness to pay (WTP). Conversely, higher ticket prices negatively…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnvironmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies · Species Distribution and Climate Change · Coastal and Marine Management
