Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere

Nature–based tourism and recreation activities have a range of environmental impacts, but most protected area agencies have limited capacity to assess them. To prioritise where and what impacts to monitor and manage, we conducted a desktop assessment using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) by c...

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Main Authors: Barros, A., Pickering, C., Gudes, Ori
Format: Journal Article
Published: Academic Press 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36260
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author Barros, A.
Pickering, C.
Gudes, Ori
author_facet Barros, A.
Pickering, C.
Gudes, Ori
author_sort Barros, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Nature–based tourism and recreation activities have a range of environmental impacts, but most protected area agencies have limited capacity to assess them. To prioritise where and what impacts to monitor and manage, we conducted a desktop assessment using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) by combining recreation ecology research with data on visitor usage and key environmental features for a popular protected area used for mountaineering and trekking, Aconcagua Provincial Park (2400–6962 m a.s.l.) in the Andes of Argentina. First, we integrated visitor data from permits with environmental data using GIS. We then identified key impact indicators for different activities based on the recreation ecology literature. Finally, we integrated this data to identify likely ecological impacts based on the types of activities, amount of use and altitudinal zones. Visitors only used 2% of the Park, but use was concentrated in areas of high conservation value including in alpine meadows and glacier lakes. Impacts on water resources were likely to be concentrated in campsites from the intermediate to the nival/glacial zones of the Park while impacts on terrestrial biodiversity were likely to be more severe in the low and intermediate alpine zones (2400–3800 m a.s.l.). These results highlight how visitor data can be used to identify priority areas for on-ground assessment of impacts in key locations. Improvements to the management of visitors in this Park involves more effective ways of dealing with water extraction and human waste in high altitude campsites and the impacts of hikers and pack animals in the low and intermediate alpine zones.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-362602017-09-13T15:18:39Z Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere Barros, A. Pickering, C. Gudes, Ori Nature–based tourism and recreation activities have a range of environmental impacts, but most protected area agencies have limited capacity to assess them. To prioritise where and what impacts to monitor and manage, we conducted a desktop assessment using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) by combining recreation ecology research with data on visitor usage and key environmental features for a popular protected area used for mountaineering and trekking, Aconcagua Provincial Park (2400–6962 m a.s.l.) in the Andes of Argentina. First, we integrated visitor data from permits with environmental data using GIS. We then identified key impact indicators for different activities based on the recreation ecology literature. Finally, we integrated this data to identify likely ecological impacts based on the types of activities, amount of use and altitudinal zones. Visitors only used 2% of the Park, but use was concentrated in areas of high conservation value including in alpine meadows and glacier lakes. Impacts on water resources were likely to be concentrated in campsites from the intermediate to the nival/glacial zones of the Park while impacts on terrestrial biodiversity were likely to be more severe in the low and intermediate alpine zones (2400–3800 m a.s.l.). These results highlight how visitor data can be used to identify priority areas for on-ground assessment of impacts in key locations. Improvements to the management of visitors in this Park involves more effective ways of dealing with water extraction and human waste in high altitude campsites and the impacts of hikers and pack animals in the low and intermediate alpine zones. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36260 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.11.004 Academic Press restricted
spellingShingle Barros, A.
Pickering, C.
Gudes, Ori
Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere
title Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere
title_full Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere
title_fullStr Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere
title_full_unstemmed Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere
title_short Desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: A case study for the highest park in the Southern Hemisphere
title_sort desktop analysis of potential impacts of visitor use: a case study for the highest park in the southern hemisphere
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36260