Abstract

Recreation and tourism are important ways that people interact with and derive benefits from natural environments. Understanding how and where nature provides recreational opportunities and benefits is necessary for management decisions that impact the environment. This study develops and tests an approach for mapping tourism patterns, and assessing people’s preferences for cultural and natural landscapes, using user-generated geographic content. The volume of geotagged images and tweets shared publicly on Flickr and Twitter and proprietary mobile phone traffic provided by a telecommunications company, are used to map visitation rates to potential tourist destinations across Jeju Island, South Korea. We find that densities of social media posts and mobile phone traffic are all correlated with ticket sales and counts of gate entries at tourist sites. Using multivariate linear regression, we measure the degree to which attributes of the natural and built environment explain variation in visitation rates, and find that tourists to Jeju Island prefer to recreate near beaches, sea cliffs, golf courses and hiking trails. We conclude that high-resolution and spatially-explicit visitation data provided by user-generated content open the door for statistical models that can quantify recreation demand. Managers and practitioners could combine these flexible and relatively inexpensive user-generated data with more traditional survey data to inform sustainable tourism development plans and policy decisions. These methods are especially useful in the context of landscape or regional-scale ecosystem service assessments, where there is a need to map the multiple ecological, economic, and cultural benefits of the environment.

Highlights

  • Recreation and tourism offer many benefits to societies and individuals, including increased mental and physical health, economic opportunities, and social cohesion [1,2,3,4]

  • We assessed the potential for user-generated content (UGC) to quantify rates of tourism, first by comparing visitation rates derived from UGC with traditional visitor counts at tourist attractions around Jeju Island, South

  • Geotagged photographs and tweets shared publicly on Flickr and Twitter, as well as mobile phone traffic provided by a large mobile telecommunications company (SKT), were all correlated with traditional entry-gate and ticket sales counts at tourist sites

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Recreation and tourism offer many benefits to societies and individuals, including increased mental and physical health, economic opportunities, and social cohesion [1,2,3,4]. These benefits are of great interest to scientists and decision-makers, who are concerned with the sustainable economic development of recreation and tourism, while preserving the natural landscapes that provide those opportunities and other benefits [5]. Conclusions drawn at one site do not necessarily transfer to other places, as visitors’

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call