Visitors’ relations to recreational facilities and attractions in a large vulnerable mountain region in Norway: Unpacking the roles of tourists and locals

IF 3.6 3区 管理学 Q1 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
V. Gundersen, S.K. Selvaag, B. Junker-Köhler, Y. Zouhar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A growing number of research studies show increasing trends of visitation to vulnerable areas, which may have negative impacts on both the local ecosystem and people's nature experience. Most of the studies deal with visitor segmentation and that different group of visitors have different impacts on the environment. This study presents site-specific visitor data at entrance level (n = 28) to examine visitor's characteristics, volume, and potential environmental impact in a large mountain area (>8000 km2) that hosts the last populations of wild reindeer in Europe. To understand visitor behaviour and their impact on the reindeer we applied push-pull strategies for the visitors to the different entrances. Our results revealed that the entrances differed considerably regarding visitor characteristics and volume, and while some entrances are typical tourism places (pull strategies), others were dominated by locals and wilderness seekers (push strategies). Based on visitors' hike length and on-off trail behaviour, our results showed that the tourist entrances had a lower impact on the wild reindeer range than entrances predominantly used by locals or wilderness seekers. Tourist entrances were predominantly used by foreign and first-time visitors on day trips, who used designated facilities, and left a relatively small spatial footprint in the fringe of the study area. By contrast, local people and wilderness seekers often made multiple day trips and commonly used off-trail areas. Additionally, our study identified a very special case of mass tourism, to a spectacular cliff, that had emerged in the last decade due to the posting of photos on social media. In describing the diversity of entrances to a vulnerable area, we argue that there is a need for management strategies that treat each entrance as unique, and as requiring site-specific solutions that provide positive experiences for visitors while minimizing the impact on the natural environment.

Management implications

  • •National park management is currently challenged by uncontrollable communications on social media

  • •Numbers of visitors to iconic attractions can increase rapidly, and management actions often come long after such increases

  • •A cycle of facilitation and increased visitor numbers at attractions often has major negative effects on visitor experiences

  • •Management needs to treat each point of entrance as unique, with site-specific solutions

  • •On-trail behaviour is susceptible to management through indirect measures

  • •Off-trail behaviour challenges the use of indirect measures and direct measures are controversial due to common access rights

在挪威的一个大型脆弱山区,游客与娱乐设施和景点的关系:解读游客和当地人的作用
越来越多的研究表明,脆弱地区的游客数量呈上升趋势,这可能会对当地生态系统和人们的自然体验产生负面影响。大多数研究都涉及游客细分,以及不同游客群体对环境的不同影响。本研究提供了游客在入口处的具体数据(n = 28),以研究游客的特征、数量以及对欧洲最后野生驯鹿种群所在的大型山区(8000 平方公里)的潜在环境影响。为了了解游客的行为及其对驯鹿的影响,我们对不同入口的游客采用了推拉策略。我们的结果表明,不同入口的游客特征和数量差别很大,有些入口是典型的旅游景点(拉动策略),有些入口则以当地人和野外探险者为主(推动策略)。根据游客的徒步长度和上山下山行为,我们的结果表明,与当地人或野外探险者为主的入口相比,游客入口对野生驯鹿分布的影响较小。游客入口主要由外国游客和首次参加一日游的游客使用,他们使用指定的设施,在研究区边缘留下的空间足迹相对较小。相比之下,当地人和野外探险者通常会进行多次一日游,并经常使用非路径区域。此外,我们的研究还发现了一个非常特殊的大众旅游案例,即在过去十年中,由于在社交媒体上发布照片,出现了前往壮观悬崖的大众旅游。在描述通往脆弱地区的入口的多样性时,我们认为有必要制定管理策略,将每个入口都视为独一无二的,并需要针对具体地点制定解决方案,在为游客提供积极体验的同时,最大限度地减少对自然环境的影响。管理意义--国家公园管理目前面临着社交媒体上不可控传播的挑战--标志性景点的游客数量可能会迅速增加,而管理行动往往是在游客数量增加之后很久才开始--景点的便利化和游客数量增加的循环往往会对游客体验产生重大负面影响--管理部门需要将每个入口点都视为独特的,并提供针对具体地点的解决方案--步道上的行为容易通过间接措施进行管理--步道外的行为对间接措施的使用提出了挑战,而直接措施则由于共同的进入权而备受争议。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
84
期刊介绍: Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism offers a dedicated outlet for research relevant to social sciences and natural resources. The journal publishes peer reviewed original research on all aspects of outdoor recreation planning and management, covering the entire spectrum of settings from wilderness to urban outdoor recreation opportunities. It also focuses on new products and findings in nature based tourism and park management. JORT is an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary journal, articles may focus on any aspect of theory, method, or concept of outdoor recreation research, planning or management, and interdisciplinary work is especially welcome, and may be of a theoretical and/or a case study nature. Depending on the topic of investigation, articles may be positioned within one academic discipline, or draw from several disciplines in an integrative manner, with overarching relevance to social sciences and natural resources. JORT is international in scope and attracts scholars from all reaches of the world to facilitate the exchange of ideas. As such, the journal enhances understanding of scientific knowledge, empirical results, and practitioners'' needs. Therefore in JORT each article is accompanied by an executive summary, written by the editors or authors, highlighting the planning and management relevant aspects of the article.
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