Abstract

This study presents the data from part of a questionnaire survey in the Dalby Forest Area, Yorkshire, England. Of nearly 200 species mentioned, visitors hoped prior to their visit that they would see roe deer, badgers, foxes, squirrels, rabbits, pheasants, woodpeckers, kingfishers and adders, but the survey indicated that what they had in fact seen was very different. The number of times that visitors mentioned five groups of wildlife (mammals, birds, plants, trees and insects) altered with four different questions used, indicating that the degree of interaction that a visitor had with these groups varied at different physical, aesthetic and emotional levels.

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