Climbing through Climate Change in the Canadian Rockies: Guides’ Experiences of Route Transformation on Mt. Athabasca

IF 1.2 Q3 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
Katherine Hanly, Graham McDowell, James Tricker
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Mountain guides play an important role in the provision of nature-based tourism activities, such as mountaineering, in alpine environments around the world. However, these locales are uniquely sensitive to climate change, and despite extensive documentation of bio-geophysical changes, there are few studies evaluating the impacts of these changes on mountaineering routes and the livelihood of mountain guides. This constrains adaptation planning and limits awareness of potential loss and damage in the mountain tourism sector. In response, our study explored mountain guides’ lived experiences of working on Mt. Athabasca in Jasper National Park, Canada, to reveal the effects of climate change on mountaineering routes and implications for the mountain guiding community. To do this, we used a mixed methods approach that combined spatio-temporal trend analysis, repeat photography, and semi-structured interviews with mountain guides. We found that rising temperatures and changing precipitation regimes in the Mt. Athabasca area are driving glacial retreat and loss of semi-permanent snow and ice, which is impacting climbing conditions and objective hazards on mountaineering and guiding routes. Guides’ experiences of these changes varied according to socio-economic conditions (e.g., financial security, livelihood flexibility), with late-career guides tending to experience loss of guiding opportunities and early-career guides facing increased pressure to provide services in more challenging conditions. Our findings offer novel insights that identify salient issues and bolster support for actions in response to the concerns of the mountain guide community. This study also underscores the need for further research, as the underlying issues are likely present in mountaineering destinations globally.
在加拿大落基山脉的气候变化中攀登:阿萨巴斯卡山路线转换的导游经验
在世界各地的高山环境中,山地导游在提供以自然为基础的旅游活动(如登山)方面发挥着重要作用。然而,这些地区对气候变化非常敏感,尽管有大量的生物地球物理变化的文献记录,但很少有研究评估这些变化对登山路线和山区导游生计的影响。这限制了适应规划,限制了对山地旅游部门潜在损失和损害的认识。为此,本研究以加拿大贾斯珀国家公园阿萨巴斯卡山登山向导的生活经历为研究对象,揭示气候变化对登山路线的影响以及对登山向导社区的启示。为此,我们采用了一种混合方法,结合了时空趋势分析、重复摄影和对山地导游的半结构化采访。研究发现,阿萨巴斯卡山地区气温上升和降水变化导致冰川退缩和半永久性冰雪损失,影响了登山条件和登山指导路线的客观危险。导游对这些变化的经历因社会经济条件(如经济保障、生计灵活性)而异,职业生涯后期的导游往往失去指导机会,职业生涯早期的导游面临更大的压力,需要在更具挑战性的条件下提供服务。我们的发现提供了新的见解,确定突出的问题,并加强对行动的支持,以响应山区向导社区的关注。这项研究还强调了进一步研究的必要性,因为潜在的问题可能在全球的登山目的地都存在。
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来源期刊
Tourism and Hospitality Management-Croatia
Tourism and Hospitality Management-Croatia HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
23.10%
发文量
33
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: Tourism and Hospitality Management is an international, multidisciplinary, open access journal, aiming to promote and enhance research in all fields of the tourism and hospitality industry. It publishes double-blind reviewed papers and encourages an interchange between tourism and hospitality researchers, educators and managers. Editors of Tourism and Hospitality Management strongly promote research integrity and aim to prevent any type of scientific misconduct, such as: fabrication, falsification, plagiarism, redundant publication and authorship problems. All submitted manuscripts are checked using Crossref Similarity Check (iThenticate). Nurturing a scientifically based approach to research, the journal publishes original papers along with empirical research and theoretical articles that contribute to the conceptual development of tourism and hospitality management. Editors look particularly for articles about new trends, challenges and developments, as well as the application of new ideas that are likely to affect the tourism and hospitality industry. The general criteria for the acceptance of articles are: contribution to the scientific knowledge in the field of tourism and hospitality management, scientifically reliable research methodology, relevant literature review and quality of the English language.
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