Title: Managing Visitor Impacts in Parks: Part II
1Managing Visitor Impacts in ParksPart II A
Survey of Visitor Response to Alternative
Management Practices
- Logan Park
- Graduate Research Assistant
- University of Vermont/Virginia Tech University
- Robert Manning
- Park Studies Laboratory
- University of Vermont
- Jeff Marion
- Steve Lawson
- Department of Forestry
- Virginia Tech University
- Charlie Jacobi
- Resources Specialist/Visitor Use
- Acadia National Park
2Research Questions
- General
- How can the environmental (and associated
social) impacts of visitor use be managed? - Specific
- What management practices are most effective at
encouraging visitors to stay on official,
maintained trails? - Why are some management practices more effective
than others? - How do management practices influence the
thinking and behavior of visitors? - How acceptable do visitors find alternative
management practices?
3Theories of Visitor Management
4Theories of Visitor Management
- Strategic purpose of management practices
5Theories of Visitor Management
- Strategic purpose of management practices
- Direct versus indirect management practices
6Theories of Visitor Management
- Strategic purpose of management practices
- Direct versus indirect management practices
- Potential effectiveness of information/education
7Application of Information/Education to
Recreation Management Problems
Adapted from Hendee et al. 1990, Roggenbuck 1992,
and Vander Stoep and Roggenbuck 1996.
8Theories of Visitor Management
- Strategic purpose of management practices
- Direct versus indirect management practices
- Potential effectiveness of information/education
- Stages of moral development
9Stages of moral development.
(From Christenson and Dustin 1989.)
10Theories of Visitor Management
- Strategic purpose of management practices
- Direct versus indirect management practices
- Potential effectiveness of information/education
- Levels of moral development
- Communication theory
11Communication Theory
- Applied behavior analysis
- Central route to persuasion
- Peripheral route to persuasion
12Study Methods
- Visitor survey
- Administered during control 1 and treatments 1-4
- Random selection at end of visit
- Response rate of 71.7
- Sample size of 590 completed questionnaires
(ranging from 100 to 161 for the control and
treatments)
13Primary Study Variables
- Whether or not visitors reported walking
off-trail - Why they did or didnt walk off-trail
- Whether they noticed a) the study treatments and
b) the environmental impacts caused by walking
off-trail - How the treatments affected their
decision-making/behavior - The degree to which visitors supported or opposed
a range of management practices
14The Sample
- Nearly evenly split between males (51.8) and
females (48.2) - Highly educated (69.9 had earned a college or
graduate degree) - Middle-aged (59.2 between 40 and 60 years old)
15Percentage of visitors walking off-trail as
self-reported by respondents and through
observation.
off-trail total for the fencing treatment /
off-trail within extent of fencing (first 50m of
trail)
16Reasons for walking off-trail
17Reasons for walking off-trail.
Data are percentage of respondents who agreed
with each statement.
18Reasons for not walking off-trail.
19Respondent awareness of management practices.
Data are percentage of respondents who reported
they were aware of these management practices
20Visitor awareness and assessment of damage to
soil and vegetation.
Data are percentage of respondents who were
aware of damage and percentage of respondents
who rated this damage as minor, moderate, or
severe.
21Acceptability of management practices.
22Acceptability of management practices (continued)
23Discussion
- Visitors underreported walking off-trail
- Treatments tended to reduce walking off-trail
(but probably not enough) - Important reasons for walking off-trail include
- exploring and photos
- walking around other visitors who are blocking
the trail - illegal and unavoidable reasons
- careless, unskilled, uninformed reasons
- insensitivity to environmental issues
- Visitors are operating on a range of moral planes
- Increasing acceptance of management practices
after their implementation
24Conclusions
- It is unlikely that indirect management practices
(e.g., information/education) will satisfactorily
solve the problem of visitors walking off-trail - We recommend an integrated suite of direct and
indirect management practices that includes - Regulation that visitors remain on the official
trail - Presence of uniformed rangers (as needed) to
enforce this regulation - Symbolic fencing along the trail
- Redesign of summit loop trail
- Extend it
- Widen it in strategic places
- Addition of spurs to photo points
25Conclusions (continued)
- Aggressive information/education
- Inform visitors of regulation and reason for it
- Identification of appropriate areas for
exploration - This type of management program should be tested
for its effectiveness - A holistic analysis of the carrying capacity of
the summit should be conducted - An emerging principle of park and outdoor
recreation management is that intensive visitor
use requires intensive management
26Conclusions (continued)
- We believe that the multiple research methods
used in this study (experimentation, observation,
visitor surveys) were complementary and
reinforcing - More research is needed on the efficacy of park
and outdoor recreation management practices