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Recreation effects on wildlife: a review of potential quantitative thresholds

期刊

NATURE CONSERVATION-BULGARIA
卷 -, 期 44, 页码 51-68

出版社

PENSOFT PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.3897/natureconservation.44.63270

关键词

Distance to people; human disturbance; park management; protected areas; recreation impacts; wildlife conservation

资金

  1. Sonoma Land Trust
  2. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recent research has identified potential effect thresholds of outdoor recreation on wildlife, which vary greatly among different species and recreational activities. Further studies focusing on continuous variables are needed to better understand the impact of recreation on wildlife.
Outdoor recreation is increasingly recognised for its deleterious effects on wildlife individuals and populations. However, planners and natural resource managers lack robust scientific recommendations for the design of recreation infrastructure and management of recreation activities. We reviewed 38 years of research on the effect of non-consumptive recreation on wildlife to attempt to identify effect thresholds or the point at which recreation begins to exhibit behavioural or physiological change to wildlife. We found that 53 of 330 articles identified a quantitative threshold. The majority of threshold articles focused on bird or mammal species and measured the distance to people or to a trail. Threshold distances varied substantially within and amongst taxonomic groups. Threshold distances for wading and passerine birds were generally less than 100 m, whereas they were greater than 400 m for hawks and eagles. Mammal threshold distances varied widely from 50 m for small rodents to 1,000 m for large ungulates. We did not find a significant difference between threshold distances of different recreation activity groups, likely based in part on low sample size. There were large gaps in scientific literature regarding several recreation variables and taxonomic groups including amphibians, invertebrates and reptiles. Our findings exhibit the need for studies to measure continuous variables of recreation extent and magnitude, not only to detect effects of recreation on wildlife, but also to identify effect thresholds when and where recreation begins or ceases to affect wildlife. Such considerations in studies of recreation ecology could provide robust scientific recommendations for planners and natural resource managers for the design of recreation infrastructure and management of recreation activities.

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