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One of the more interesting debates in documentary travel photography is the use of local artisans to portray "authentic" experiences. In nearly every corner of the world, traditional ways of life are giving way to the economic realities that rising costs of living, environmental pressures and an ever-expanding globalized economy impose. And in our increasingly stylized online world, the constant pursuit of follower fame, ad dollars and Instagrammable content often obscures and distorts the truth in what we see.

Here off the southern coasts of Sri Lanka, since World War II, fishermen have forged a meager living by scaling improvised crosshatched wooden platforms sunk deep into the sandy shore bottoms to catch fish to consume and sell. Returns from stilt fishing were never good, with local fisheries already in steep decline for decades, and remaining stocks seeking deeper waters during much of the monsoon season. Many of those fishermen were forced to supplement their survival by buying bulk catches from passing trawlers and reselling them on the local market. However, until recently, these men nonetheless persevered.

The "Boxing Day" tsunami that devastated Sri Lanka in 2004 changed all of that.

ELEPHANT DIES OF 'EXHAUSTION' FROM CARRYING TOURISTS IN SRI LANKA

The cataclysmic event permanently altered Sri Lanka’s coastal topography, pushing the seafloor further inland and creating a shallower coastline. The seismic waves took many hundreds of resident fishermen with them, and destroyed much of the inshore reefs that sustained their supply of fish and their economy -- effectively ending the practice altogether.

This crude memorial was erected at the site where the 2004 ‘Boxing Day’ Tsunami made landfall at Yala National Park in southern Sri Lanka. Each curved metal column represents the number of seismic waves that crashed ashore.

This crude memorial was erected at the site where the 2004 ‘Boxing Day’ Tsunami made landfall at Yala National Park in southern Sri Lanka. Each curved metal column represents the number of seismic waves that crashed ashore. (Trey Bohn)

Yet in the years since, the fishermen who endured discovered that visiting tourists, perhaps inspired by National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry’s iconic photographs taken here in the 1990s, remained keen to photograph them, and proffer "tips" to stage photo shoots depicting this bygone way of life -- a much simpler and often more lucrative proposition.

As a result, the men in the photos below are, in effect, actors. Paid a small fee to recreate a lifestyle that no longer exists, they spend part of their days waiting for tourists to pass by and ask them to pose for this very scene.

Three men recreate a non-existent way of life in water so shallow, the prospect of catching fish strains credulity.

Three men recreate a non-existent way of life in water so shallow, the prospect of catching fish strains credulity. (Trey Bohn)

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It would be futile to argue against the benefits that tourism dollars produce in these places, especially those generated from a low-impact activity such as this. And, with very little relative cost required from visiting foreigners who can afford to travel here, the comparatively small amounts exchanged can feed, clothe and house families much more efficiently and to greater transformative effect than any days and weeks of prospective fishing potentially could. Without question, these men are supplying a lowbrow service to meet current demand; and, it must be said, the adaptive, entrepreneurial methods they have employed to meet their needs, and presumably those of their families, is commendable.

Of course, this phenomenon isn’t unique to Sri Lanka. Indeed, along China’s Li River, the contrivance is even more comprehensive, where tour operators and government bureaus employ locals to stage and perform acts of traditional life for visitors. Seemingly content with the arrangement and genuinely entertained, the demand for this brand of tourism these visitors have created has transformed large areas of China from once quaint, hard-to-find backwater villages into featured destinations in glossy tourism brochures -- replete with chockablock hotels, banquet halls, restaurants and souvenir shops.

Actors stage a wedding on the Li River, in the Guangxi Province of China.

Actors stage a wedding on the Li River, in the Guangxi Province of China. (Trey Bohn)

Can a travel photograph be both inauthentic and convincing at the same time? Certainly. What remains less clear, however, is how it should be presented for public consumption. For photojournalists, the lines are well-defined, as the photographer’s code of ethics from the National Press Photographers Association is unambiguous: “Resist being manipulated by staged photo opportunities,” and: “Do not pay sources or subjects or reward them materially for information or participation.”

When you consider the rise of social media "influencers" with questionable credibility, and travel bloggers’ and brands’ ceaseless pursuit of eyeballs and cheap content -- and under no agreed-upon ethical standard -- the lines of acceptable disclosure have been unnaturally blurred. Complicating matters, original travel experiences, and genuine endemic cultures and traditions, are disappearing and becoming increasingly difficult to observe and capture. Generally speaking, these elements can combine to seduce some into taking shortcuts, and resorting to deceptive and dubious photographic practices.

A tourist watches trained cormorants prepare to ‘fish’ along the Li River in southern China. Note the bucket already full of fish by the trainer.

A tourist watches trained cormorants prepare to ‘fish’ along the Li River in southern China. Note the bucket already full of fish by the trainer. (Trey Bohn)

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Mendacity in photography isn’t anything new and dates back to its dawn. However, what would require superior darkroom skills decades ago can now be accomplished with a few mouse clicks given the sophisticated photo editing software widely available today. What’s more, 60 percent of the global population now has access to the Internet; and more than half of them have smartphones, making online digital photography accessible to billions -- and the competition for visibility fierce.

In 2015, judges for the World Press Photo competition axed 20 percent of the entries submitted for final-round consideration. The unprecedented number of disqualifications, citing excessive and, in some cases, blatant acts of significant manipulation of the content of the photos, was three times that of the previous year’s contest, and sent a chill throughout the industry, as The New York Times noted.

Photographers today are under increasing pressure to do more to push the envelope, to stand out in a crowded field and to make a name for themselves, but significantly altered or posed-for work that isn’t properly communicated should never be held up for praise and acclaim. To be sure, unscrupulous image manipulation and staged photo opportunities that lack appropriate disclosure deserve collective scorn. Self-policing and transparency should always remain first principles. Furthermore, watering down the standards that photographers, photo contest judges and publishers adhere to would create a false choice, and send an ill-advised and reckless message to photographers, the industry as a whole and the consumers they intend to inform.

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This article originally appeared on PhotoBohn.com. Trey Bohn is a freelance travel and culture photographer based in New York City. A former White House spokesperson and current recovering politico, he now travels the world in search of interesting stories and experiences to document. For more, visit: www.PhotoBohn.com, or follow @photo_bohn on Instagram.