Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic affected people all over the world, including the Czech Republic (CZ). In the CZ, a number of measures were applied in 2020 to reduce the contact between people and their mobility. This article dealt with the importance of forests during the pandemic. Data from 2019 and 2020 were compared. The qualitative data were obtained from two nationwide surveys, the first focused on forest attendance and forest fruit collection (about 1000 respondents per year), the second on the motivation to visit the forests (about 3700 respondents per year). The quantitative data were obtained on the regional level by analysing data from mobility counters. The impact of government restrictions was assessed. Findings: (1) there was a significant increase in the number of people who frequently visited the forest in 2020; (2) in 2020, the amount of households that collected forest fruits increased and was the highest for the monitored period; (3) the increased forest attendance significantly corresponded to the government restrictions. The analysis confirmed the great importance of forests for the citizens and, at the same time, the increased pressure on the forests’ use—forest attendance and forest crops picking—(especially suburban ones) in times of COVID-19 restrictions.

Highlights

  • The current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, which first appeared in China in 2019, is a global problem that has affected the Czech Republic (CZ)

  • The results of the submitted analyses clearly show that the COVID-19 pandemic led the inhabitants of the Czech Republic to make a significant change in their forest attendance

  • Possible to clearly answer YES to RQ1. (Have the restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic increased forest attendance and motivation to visit the forest?)

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Summary

Introduction

The current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, which first appeared in China in 2019, is a global problem that has affected the Czech Republic (CZ). The development of the disease and the burden/overload of the health-care system was followed by a number of anti-epidemic measures to prevent the further spread of the disease in the Czech Republic, especially in the form of restrictions that led to the reduced mobility of the population (e.g., closing shops, schools, the possibility to work from home, etc.). Many of these measures were linked to the so-called state of emergency.

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