4.7 Article

Social media reveal ecoregional variation in how weather influences visitor behavior in US National Park Service units

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-82145-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1633756]
  2. Utah State University Office of Research
  3. Institute of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism at Utah State University

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Daily weather conditions, including temperature and precipitation, have a significant impact on visitors' spatial behavior within parks, with visitors tending to stay closer to infrastructure on rainy days. The effect of weather on visitor behavior varies across different ecoregions, suggesting that visitors may adapt differently to unfavorable conditions. Furthermore, the increasing frequency of hot summer days may lead to changes in visitors' spatial behavior in parks in the future.
Daily weather affects total visitation to parks and protected areas, as well as visitors' experiences. However, it is unknown if and how visitors change their spatial behavior within a park due to daily weather conditions. We investigated the impact of daily maximum temperature and precipitation on summer visitation patterns within 110 U.S. National Park Service units. We connected 489,061 geotagged Flickr photos to daily weather, as well as visitors' elevation and distance to amenities (i.e., roads, waterbodies, parking areas, and buildings). We compared visitor behavior on cold, average, and hot days, and on days with precipitation compared to days without precipitation, across fourteen ecoregions within the continental U.S. Our results suggest daily weather impacts where visitors go within parks, and the effect of weather differs substantially by ecoregion. In most ecoregions, visitors stayed closer to infrastructure on rainy days. Temperature also affects visitors' spatial behavior within parks, but there was not a consistent trend across ecoregions. Importantly, parks in some ecoregions contain more microclimates than others, which may allow visitors to adapt to unfavorable conditions. These findings suggest visitors' spatial behavior in parks may change in the future due to the increasing frequency of hot summer days.

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