宏伟的期望:了解怀俄明州大提顿国家公园游客的动机和结果干扰

W. Rice, B. D. Taff, P. Newman, Z. Miller, A. D’Antonio, Jenna Baker, C. Monz, Jennifer N. Newton, K. Zipp
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引用次数: 8

摘要

近年来,国家公园管理局(NPS)的游客数量显著增加。从2014年到2016年,大提顿国家公园(GTNP)的休闲游客增加了17%。管理日益增加的使用,部分是由新的和新颖的娱乐活动类型驱动的,是NPS日益关注的问题。本研究使用定性方法来研究GTNP热门的String和Leigh Lakes (SLL)地区的新兴活动类型与游客使用增加的配对如何导致公园游客之间的结果干扰。在这个地区,划独木舟、野餐和日间徒步旅行等娱乐活动已经很受欢迎,但随着冲浪板等新用途的涌入,湖泊的管理又增加了一层复杂性。游客和活动多样性的增加,加上车辆通道和停车场的限制,造成了游客拥挤和流离失所的环境。利用娱乐机会需求层次(RODH)和结果导向管理(OFM)框架,本研究探讨了游客的活动、设置和动机,以及可能干扰收益实现的结果干扰变量。为了为这项工作提供信息,2017年夏季在SLL地区使用随机抽样技术编制了62个半结构化访谈。使用盲编码技术对数据进行分析,结果表明冲突、拥挤和流离失所是可能的结果干扰变量,可以在未来的研究和监测工作中针对SLL地区及其他地区。结果还表明,游客对之前的娱乐结果反应理性。此外,我们还研究了我们的结果如何能够解决对OFM的常见批评。最后,我们提出了一个新的RODH迭代,即理性休闲需求层次(RRDH),其结果直接指导未来的休闲决策。本研究的发现和更新的以结果为中心的框架为管理者提供了各种启示。这些包括作为质量指标的结果和结果干扰变量的管理,一种概念化结果成就如何影响有关娱乐活动和设置的未来决策的方法,以及将保护区游客视为理性决策者的待遇。此外,这项研究还提供了一个关于游客人数增加如何影响游客体验的小插曲,这是美国国家公园广泛报道的一种现象。订阅JPRA
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Grand Expectations: Understanding Visitor Motivations and Outcome Interference in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
National Park Service (NPS) units have seen a significant increase in visitation in recent years. From 2014 to 2016, Grand Teton National Park (GTNP) experienced a 17% increase in recreational visits. Managing for increased use, driven partially by new and novel types of recreation activities, is a growing issue of concern for the NPS. This study uses a qualitative approach to examine how emerging activity types paired with increased visitor use in GTNP’s popular String and Leigh Lakes (SLL) area may lead to outcome interference among park visitors. An influx of novel uses, such as paddleboarding, to an area that is already popular for a myriad of recreation activities, including canoeing, picnicking, and day hiking, adds a layer of complexity to the management of the lakes. This increase in visitation and activity diversity, combined with limited vehicle access and parking, is creating an environment in which crowding and displacement of visitors is occurring. Using the recreational opportunity demand hierarchy (RODH) and an outcomes-focused management (OFM) framework, this study explores visitor activities, settings, and motivations, as well as possible outcome-interfering variables that may interfere with benefit-achievement. To inform this effort, 62 semi-structured interviews were compiled using a random-sampling technique in the SLL area during the summer of 2017. Data were analyzed using a blind coding technique and results suggest that conflict, crowding, and displacement are possible outcome-interfering variables that can be targeted in future research and monitoring efforts in the SLL area and beyond. The results also indicate that visitors react rationally to previous recreational outcomes. Additionally, we examine how our results can address common critiques of OFM. Finally, we propose a new iteration of the RODH, the rational recreation demand hierarchy (RRDH), in which outcomes direct future recreational decisions. The findings of this study and the updated outcomes-focused framework provide a variety of implications to managers. These include the management of outcomes and outcome-interfering variables as indicators of quality, a means of conceptualizing how outcome-achievement influences future decision-making concerning recreational activities and settings, and the treatment of protected area visitors as rational decision makers. Additionally, this study provides a vignette of how increased visitation, a phenomenon widely reported across US national parks, influences visitor experience. Subscribe to JPRA
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