Azores
The Azores attract thousands visitors every year to “exceptional meetings” with dolphins, cachalots or whales. The most sought after destinations for “Wildlife Tourism” are.
O Wildlife Tourism It is expanding. According to a new study, this type of tourism is growing 5.2% per year, as travelers embrace biofilia – Our deep need to bind to nature.
From beaches full of pigs in the Bahamas, to capybaras dipped in Japanese thermal sources, to the Atlantic’s most dazzling cetaceans in the Azores.
But after all, what are the savage animal experiences that are capturing the most attention around the world?
On the fringes of World Nature Conservation Day (July 28), Jr Pass analyzed the volumes of Wildlife Tourism and the involvement of social networks and made one of the “most sought after animal meetings in 2025”.
Thailand’s Monkeys Beach
Leading with 68,000 monthly surveys, the uninhabited Monkey Beach de You Don Thailandlong tail monkeys receive, in their untouched natural habitat, thousands of bathers a year.
Famous for being the movie place for Leonardo DiCaprio’s movie “A Praia”, this paradise island has only one day excursions, Not allowing overnight.
The monkeys wandered freely along the white sand beaches, creating a dignified instagram scenario that has already generated 182,000 hashtags and continues to increase.
Tanzania’s millions of flamingos
Os Flamingos-Peoklands of Lake Natron, in Tanzaniathey occupy second place with 39,000 monthly surveys for a good reason.
More than one million flamingos-phelenne migrate here annually, transforming the.
This alkaline lake, “toxic as lixia”, welcomes 75% of the world’s people of flamingos. The “height” is during the breeding season, from August to November.
Azores occupy the third place
The Azores attract 26,000 monthly surveys for “exceptional meetings” with dolphins and whales.
This “Treasury in the Atlantic” Hos More than 28 species In the Atlantic waters, such as playful dolphins, huge cachalots and blue whales.
The peak observation, from May to September, offers, as the study describes, “sightings in stunning volcanic island scenarios, with sustainable tourism practices that are internationally recognized for conservation efforts.”