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Exploring visitor acceptability for hardening trails to sustain visitation and minimize impacts

January 1, 2008

Protected natural area managers are challenged to provide high quality recreation opportunities and ensure the protection of resources from impacts associated with visitation. Development of visitor use facilities and application of site hardening practices are commonly applied tools for achieving these competing management objectives. This study applies stated choice analysis to examine visitor opinions on acceptability when they are asked to make tradeoffs among competing social, resource and management attributes in backcountry and frontcountry settings of Acadia National Park. This study demonstrates that asking visitors about recreation setting attributes uni-dimensionally, a common approach, can yield less informative responses. Analyses that considered direct tradeoffs revealed more divergent opinions on acceptability for setting attributes than a unidimensional approach. Findings revealed that visitors to an accessible and popular attraction feature supported trail development options to protect resource conditions with unrestricted visitor access. In contrast, visitors to a remote undeveloped island expressed stronger support for no or limited trail development and access restrictions to protect resource conditions.

Publication Year 2008
Title Exploring visitor acceptability for hardening trails to sustain visitation and minimize impacts
DOI 10.2167/jost804.0
Authors K.L. Cahill, J. L. Marion, S.R. Lawson
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Sustainable Tourism
Index ID 5224933
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center