A co-designed method to guide decision-making in protected area visitor centres
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/96160Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Moreno Llorca, Ricardo; García Morales, Víctor Jesús; Llorens Montes, Francisco J.; Ramos Ridao, Ángel Fermín; Alcaraz Segura, Domingo; Mazariegos Navarrete, JavierEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Recreational managemen Nature-based tourism Co-production science Ecotourism Natural parks Andalusia
Fecha
2019Resumen
Protected areas (PAs) constitute the largest global effort for biodiversity conservation and the maintenance of
ecosystem services. Science-based management, grounded in methods co-designed by scientists and managers, is
necessary to improve the efficiency of PAs to achieve these goals and to promote sustainable development.
Visitor centres (VCs) in PAs play an important role to facilitate the supply of recreational ecosystem services and
to promote environmental awareness. In this study, scientists and managers co-developed a method to assess
visitors' perceptions of the recreational activities carried out in VCs and how they depend on the type of visitors.
The research was performed at 13 PAs in Andalusia (Spain). A questionnaire that measures users' satisfaction
with the services provided by VCs was implemented in two phases: 1) selection of items through the critical
incident technique, and 2) validation of the scale by using exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. The
main result is an instrument composed of 18 indicators classified into three dimensions: information, facilities
and service received from personnel. The instrument provides additional information useful for managers, such
as homogeneity of valuation throughout the PA network and sociocultural factors that may explain the differences
in visitors' valuation. The instrument developed could either be used directly or adapted for recreation
management in other similar PAs. The proposed methodology can also be reproduced to validate other measurement
instruments. This study illustrates how the development of a collaborative research method by scholars
and practitioners can improve recreational management in PAs.