
Researchers say that the first study to attempt to gauge global visitation figures for protected areas reveals nature-based tourism has an economic value of hundreds of billions of dollars annually, and call for much greater investment in the conservation of protected areas in line with the values they sustain 鈥 both economically and ecologically.
Researchers say that the first study to attempt to gauge global visitation figures for protected areas reveals nature-based tourism has an economic value of hundreds of billions of dollars annually, and call for much greater investment in the conservation of protected areas in line with the values they sustain 鈥 both economically and ecologically.
We鈥檝e shown that through tourism nature reserves contribute in a big way to the global economy 鈥 yet many are being degraded through encroachment and illegal harvesting
Andrew Balmford
探花直播world鈥檚 national parks and nature reserves receive around eight billion visits every year, according to the first study into the global scale of nature-based tourism in protected areas. 探花直播paper, by researchers in Cambridge, UK, Princeton, New Jersey, and Washington, DC, published in the open access journal , is the first global-scale attempt to answer the question of how many visits protected areas receive, and what they might be worth in terms of tourist dollars.
探花直播authors of the study say that this number of visits could generate as much as US$600 billion of tourism expenditure annually - a huge economic benefit which vastly exceeds the less than US$10 billion spent safeguarding these sites each year.
Scientists and conservation experts describe current global expenditure on protected areas as 鈥済rossly insufficient鈥, and have called for greatly increased investment in the maintenance and expansion of protected areas 鈥 a move which this study shows would yield substantial economic return 鈥 as well as saving incalculably precious natural landscapes and species from destruction.
鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic that people visit protected areas so often, and are getting so much from experiencing wild nature 鈥 it鈥檚 clearly important to people and we should celebrate that,鈥 said lead author , from Cambridge 探花直播鈥檚 Department of Zoology.
鈥淭hese pieces of the world provide us with untold benefits: from stabilising the global climate and regulating water flows to protecting untold numbers of species. Now we鈥檝e shown that through tourism nature reserves contribute in a big way to the global economy 鈥 yet many are being degraded through encroachment and illegal harvesting, and some are being lost altogether. It鈥檚 time that governments invested properly in protected areas.鈥
Dr Andrea Manica, a corresponding author also at Cambridge, said these are ballpark estimates based on limited data, so the researchers have been careful not to overstate the case: 鈥淭hese are conservative calculations. Visit rates are likely to be higher than eight billion a year, and there鈥檚 no doubt we are talking about hundreds of billions of tourism dollars a year,鈥 he said.听
探花直播attempt to calculate these figures was in part borne from frustration, said Balmford. 鈥淲e study what people get out of nature, so-called 鈥榚cosystem services鈥. While some ecosystem services are difficult to measure 鈥 such as cultural or religious benefits 鈥 we thought that nature-based recreation would be quite tractable: there鈥檚 a market and tangible visits you can count.听听听
鈥淗owever, when we started to investigate we found no-one had yet pieced the data together. So we got to work trawling for figures ourselves. After a few months we had constructed a database from which we could build our models. It鈥檚 limited, but it鈥檚 the best there is at the moment,鈥 Balmford said.听
探花直播database consists of visiting figures for 550 sites worldwide, which were then used to build equations that could predict visit rates for a further 140,000 protected areas based on their size, remoteness, national income, and so on.
探花直播results surprised even seasoned conservation researchers. Nature tourism expert and team member Dr Matt Walpole of the UN鈥檚 World Conservation Monitoring Centre calls their cautious estimate of eight billion annual visits an 鈥渁stonishing figure that illustrates the value people place on experiencing nature鈥.
Visit rates were highest in North America, where protected areas receive a combined total of over three billion visits a year, and lowest in Africa, where many countries have less than 100,000 protected area visits annually.
探花直播Golden Gate National Recreation Area near San Francisco had the highest recorded visit rate in the database with an annual average of 13.7m visits, closely followed by the UK鈥檚 Lake District and Peak District National Parks, with 10.5m and 10.1m. By contrast, Tanzania鈥檚 Serengeti National Park got an annual average during the study period of 148,000 visits.
Team member Dr Jonathan Green, based in Cambridge, points out that it is far from just exotic places and large national parks that contribute to the visitation value of protected areas. 鈥淔or many people, it鈥檚 the nature reserve on their doorstep where they walk the dog every Sunday鈥. Fowlmere nature reserve, a few miles south of Cambridge 探花直播, receives an average of almost 23,000 visits a year.听
By combining regional visit rates with region-specific averages for visitor spending 鈥 on everything from entry fees to transport and accommodation 鈥 the researchers were able to derive the most complete picture yet of the global economic significance of protected area visitation.听听
鈥淥ur US$600 billion figure for the annual value of protected area tourism is likely to be an underestimate 鈥 yet it dwarfs the less than US$10 billion spent annually on safeguarding and managing these areas,鈥 said Dr Robin Naidoo of World Wildlife Fund, another author of the study. 鈥淭hrough previous research, we know that the existing reserve network probably needs three to four times what is currently being spent on it鈥.
鈥淲hile that may seem a lot of money, it鈥檚 a fraction of the economic benefit we get from protected areas 鈥 nature-based tourism is just one part,鈥 said Balmford.
By way of context, he points to the recent announcement by computing giant Apple of record profits of US$18 billion in a single quarter. 鈥淪topping the unfolding extinction crisis is not unaffordable. Three months of Apple profits could go a long way to securing the future of nature. Humanity doesn鈥檛 need electronic communication to survive. But we do need the rest of the planet.鈥
Top ten most visited Protected Areas:
Protected Area | Average annual visit numbers |
---|---|
Golden Gate National Recreation Area, US | 13.7m |
Lake District National Park, UK | 10.5m |
Peak District National Park, UK | 10.1m |
Lake Mead National Recreation Area, US | 7.7m |
North York Moors National Park, UK | 7.3m |
Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, US | 5m |
Dartmoor National Park, UK | 4.3m |
New Forest National Park, UK | 4.3m |
Grand Canyon National Park, US | 4.29m |
Cape Cod National Seashore, US | 4.1m |
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