In this research, we systematically reviewed the impacts of wildlife tourism on human-wildlife
conflict. Our findings of the four thematic areas provided significant insights about the previous
research. They indicated that “wildlife management” and “disturbance” are emerging fields of
research in this domain, and more recently, themes emerged around “human-wildlife conflict,”
“climate change,” and “ethnoprimatology.” Our literature showed that most of the wildlife
tourism conflict involved wildlife behavior change (22.72%), crop riding (15.90%), and livestock
depredation (9.09%), and few attempts have been made to explore the effects of wildlife tourism
on other aspects of conflict such as attacks on human and negative attitudes towards wildlife. We
provided significant insights about key areas of interest in wildlife tourism research, and it is
expected that human-wildlife conflict will play a key role in generating future research on
wildlife ecotourism research, which is necessary for human-wildlife coexistence.