Abstract

There is an increasing need for spatial planning to manage coastal tourism, and applying social media data has emerged as an effective strategy to support coastal tourism spatial planning. Researchers and decision-makers require spatially explicit information that effectively reveals the current visitation state of the region. The purpose of this study is to identify coastal tourism hotspots considering appropriate spatial units in the regional scale using social media data to examine the advantages and limitations of applying spatial hotspots to spatial planning. Data from Flickr and Twitter with 30″ spatial resolution were obtained from four South Korean regions. Coastal tourism hotspots were then derived using Getis-Ord Gi. Comparing the derived hotspot maps with the visitation rate distribution maps, the derived hotspot maps sufficiently identified the spatial influences of visitors and tourist attractions applicable for spatial planning. As the spatial autocorrelation of social media data differs based on the spatial unit, coastal tourism hotspots according to spatial unit are inevitably different. Spatial hotspots derived from the appropriate spatial unit using social media data are useful for coastal tourism spatial planning.

Highlights

  • Coastal tourism is growing rapidly [1]; since the 1950s, the number of international tourists has been steadily increasing, exceeding 1.4 billion in 2018 [2,3]

  • The purpose of this study was to determine whether spatial hotspots for coastal tourism can help coastal tourism spatial planning at the regional spatial unit

  • Social media data were collected to estimate the spatial distribution of coastal tourism

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal tourism is growing rapidly [1]; since the 1950s, the number of international tourists has been steadily increasing, exceeding 1.4 billion in 2018 [2,3]. The coastal and marine tourism industry is growing and is expected to employ 1.5 million more people by 2030 compared to 2010 Coastal tourism typically has a negative impact on the surrounding coastal ecosystem because of tourists and facilities around the coast [5]. The Boracay Island, a vacation location in the Philippines, has undergone ecosystem changes due to over-tourism, with the island closing for six months in 2018 to reduce its impact on the ecosystem [6]. Coastal tourism may be a reason to sustainably preserve coastal ecosystems, and it can benefit communities [7].

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