Jeff Marion, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 123
Recreation impacts to cliff resources in the Potomac Gorge: Final report, June 2011 Recreation impacts to cliff resources in the Potomac Gorge: Final report, June 2011
Managers of the National Park Service (NPS) are directed by law to accommodate appropriate types and amounts of visitation while ensuring that: any adverse impacts are the minimum necessary, unavoidable, cannot be further mitigated, and do not constitute impairment or derogation of park resources and values. (NPS 2006). The increasing popularity of the national park system presents...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, C. Carr, C.A. Davis
Informal and formal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Acadia National Park Informal and formal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Acadia National Park
At Acadia National Park, changing visitor use levels and patterns have contributed to an increasing degree of visitor use impacts to natural and cultural resources. To better understand the extent and severity of these resource impacts and identify effective management techniques, the park sponsored this research to develop monitoring protocols, collect baseline data, and identify...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy F. Wimpey, L. Park
Formal and informal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Great Falls Park and Potomac Gorge. Final research report Formal and informal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Great Falls Park and Potomac Gorge. Final research report
This report presents the results of research on the conditions of formal and informal (visitorcreated) trails conducted within the Great Falls Park (GFP) portion of George Washington Memorial Parkway (GWMP), Virginia, and the adjacent Maryland portions of the C&O Canal National Historical Park (CHOH). This research was prompted primarily by concerns about the impact of extensive informal...
Authors
Jeremy Wimpey, Jeffrey L. Marion
Indicators and protocols for monitoring impacts of formal and informal trails in protected areas Indicators and protocols for monitoring impacts of formal and informal trails in protected areas
Trails are a common recreation infrastructure in protected areas and their conditions affect the quality of natural resources and visitor experiences. Various trail impact indicators and assessment protocols have been developed in support of monitoring programs, which are often used for management decision-making or as part of visitor capacity management frameworks. This paper reviews...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Yu-Fai Leung
The science of trail surveys: Recreation ecology provides new tools for managing wilderness trails The science of trail surveys: Recreation ecology provides new tools for managing wilderness trails
Recreation ecology examines the effects of recreation on protected area ecosystems. One core focus of recreation ecology research is trail science, including the development of efficient protocols to assess and monitor the type and severity of resource impacts, analyses to improve knowledge of factors that influence trail conditions, and studies to assist land managers in improving trail...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy F. Wimpey, Logan O. Park
Assessment and monitoring of recreation impacts and resource conditions on mountain summits: Examples from the Northern Forest, USA Assessment and monitoring of recreation impacts and resource conditions on mountain summits: Examples from the Northern Forest, USA
Mountain summits present a unique challenge to manage sustainably: they are ecologically important and, in many circumstances, under high demand for recreation and tourism activities. This article presents recent advances in the assessment of resource conditions and visitor disturbance in mountain summit environments, by drawing on examples from a multiyear, interdisciplinary study of...
Authors
Christopher A. Monz, Jeffrey L. Marion, Kelly A. Goonan, Robert E. Manning, Jeremy Wimpey, Christopher Carr
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 123
Recreation impacts to cliff resources in the Potomac Gorge: Final report, June 2011 Recreation impacts to cliff resources in the Potomac Gorge: Final report, June 2011
Managers of the National Park Service (NPS) are directed by law to accommodate appropriate types and amounts of visitation while ensuring that: any adverse impacts are the minimum necessary, unavoidable, cannot be further mitigated, and do not constitute impairment or derogation of park resources and values. (NPS 2006). The increasing popularity of the national park system presents...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, C. Carr, C.A. Davis
Informal and formal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Acadia National Park Informal and formal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Acadia National Park
At Acadia National Park, changing visitor use levels and patterns have contributed to an increasing degree of visitor use impacts to natural and cultural resources. To better understand the extent and severity of these resource impacts and identify effective management techniques, the park sponsored this research to develop monitoring protocols, collect baseline data, and identify...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy F. Wimpey, L. Park
Formal and informal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Great Falls Park and Potomac Gorge. Final research report Formal and informal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Great Falls Park and Potomac Gorge. Final research report
This report presents the results of research on the conditions of formal and informal (visitorcreated) trails conducted within the Great Falls Park (GFP) portion of George Washington Memorial Parkway (GWMP), Virginia, and the adjacent Maryland portions of the C&O Canal National Historical Park (CHOH). This research was prompted primarily by concerns about the impact of extensive informal...
Authors
Jeremy Wimpey, Jeffrey L. Marion
Indicators and protocols for monitoring impacts of formal and informal trails in protected areas Indicators and protocols for monitoring impacts of formal and informal trails in protected areas
Trails are a common recreation infrastructure in protected areas and their conditions affect the quality of natural resources and visitor experiences. Various trail impact indicators and assessment protocols have been developed in support of monitoring programs, which are often used for management decision-making or as part of visitor capacity management frameworks. This paper reviews...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Yu-Fai Leung
The science of trail surveys: Recreation ecology provides new tools for managing wilderness trails The science of trail surveys: Recreation ecology provides new tools for managing wilderness trails
Recreation ecology examines the effects of recreation on protected area ecosystems. One core focus of recreation ecology research is trail science, including the development of efficient protocols to assess and monitor the type and severity of resource impacts, analyses to improve knowledge of factors that influence trail conditions, and studies to assist land managers in improving trail...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy F. Wimpey, Logan O. Park
Assessment and monitoring of recreation impacts and resource conditions on mountain summits: Examples from the Northern Forest, USA Assessment and monitoring of recreation impacts and resource conditions on mountain summits: Examples from the Northern Forest, USA
Mountain summits present a unique challenge to manage sustainably: they are ecologically important and, in many circumstances, under high demand for recreation and tourism activities. This article presents recent advances in the assessment of resource conditions and visitor disturbance in mountain summit environments, by drawing on examples from a multiyear, interdisciplinary study of...
Authors
Christopher A. Monz, Jeffrey L. Marion, Kelly A. Goonan, Robert E. Manning, Jeremy Wimpey, Christopher Carr