Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark. / Laursen, Karsten; Kaae, Berit C.; Bladt, Jesper; Skov-Petersen, Hans; Clausen, Preben; Olafsson, Anton Stahl; Draux, Hélène; Bregnballe, Thomas.

I: Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, Bind 35, 2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Laursen, K, Kaae, BC, Bladt, J, Skov-Petersen, H, Clausen, P, Olafsson, AS, Draux, H & Bregnballe, T 2021, 'Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark', Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, bind 35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2021.100399

APA

Laursen, K., Kaae, B. C., Bladt, J., Skov-Petersen, H., Clausen, P., Olafsson, A. S., Draux, H., & Bregnballe, T. (2021). Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark. Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, 35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2021.100399

Vancouver

Laursen K, Kaae BC, Bladt J, Skov-Petersen H, Clausen P, Olafsson AS o.a. Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark. Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism. 2021;35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2021.100399

Author

Laursen, Karsten ; Kaae, Berit C. ; Bladt, Jesper ; Skov-Petersen, Hans ; Clausen, Preben ; Olafsson, Anton Stahl ; Draux, Hélène ; Bregnballe, Thomas. / Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark. I: Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism. 2021 ; Bind 35.

Bibtex

@article{1bad9e25b0ce4cfca7ced98565cdd249,
title = "Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark",
abstract = "Coastal zones are important for recreational activities and waterbirds. However, recreational activities may have negative implications for birdlife, which calls for balancing of both types of use by integrated coastal and marine planning and management. Successful integrated management and planning require spatiotemporal knowledge about the species needing protection and the outdoor recreation activities. This paper examines water-oriented outdoor recreation in Denmark in terms of activities, seasonality and geographical distribution, and presents a national screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreational activities and waterbirds based on 10,291 responses and 6,499 geographical positions. In total 77.6% of the Danish population participated in water-oriented outdoor recreation activities at least once within a year. The most frequent activities were to move along or stay on the coast/shore (63.9%), to bathe and swim (34.4%) and to observe nature and wildlife (20.3%). Overlap between recreation and waterbirds, representing potential conflicts, ranged from 0.8% in winter on water to 27.7% in summer on the coast. The results revealed significant negative effects between recreational activities and abundance of waterbirds during spring and summer on the water. The results also indicate that most recreational activities use areas with no or low densities of waterbirds. Successful coastal and marine planning requires application of management tools that include educational and interpretative initiatives to enhance coexistence. However, for detailed management, more studies are urgently needed of spatiotemporal patterns, adaptations, conflicts and coexistence between recreational activity and waterbirds. Management implications The results support integrated planning and management of water-based recreation in conjunction with waterbirds by: -Providing spatially explicit year-round data on recreational and waterbird use of coastal and marine areas.-Obtaining the first ever national overview of potential areas of conflict and of possibilities for coexistence between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds.-Identifying specific local areas in need of management action and more detailed studies of effects and impacts of coastal and marine recreation on waterbirds.",
keywords = "Breeding birds, Ecosystem services, Marine planning, Moulting birds, Outdoor recreation, PPGIS",
author = "Karsten Laursen and Kaae, {Berit C.} and Jesper Bladt and Hans Skov-Petersen and Preben Clausen and Olafsson, {Anton Stahl} and H{\'e}l{\`e}ne Draux and Thomas Bregnballe",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.jort.2021.100399",
language = "English",
volume = "35",
journal = "Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism",
issn = "2213-0780",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Countrywide screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds in Denmark

AU - Laursen, Karsten

AU - Kaae, Berit C.

AU - Bladt, Jesper

AU - Skov-Petersen, Hans

AU - Clausen, Preben

AU - Olafsson, Anton Stahl

AU - Draux, Hélène

AU - Bregnballe, Thomas

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Coastal zones are important for recreational activities and waterbirds. However, recreational activities may have negative implications for birdlife, which calls for balancing of both types of use by integrated coastal and marine planning and management. Successful integrated management and planning require spatiotemporal knowledge about the species needing protection and the outdoor recreation activities. This paper examines water-oriented outdoor recreation in Denmark in terms of activities, seasonality and geographical distribution, and presents a national screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreational activities and waterbirds based on 10,291 responses and 6,499 geographical positions. In total 77.6% of the Danish population participated in water-oriented outdoor recreation activities at least once within a year. The most frequent activities were to move along or stay on the coast/shore (63.9%), to bathe and swim (34.4%) and to observe nature and wildlife (20.3%). Overlap between recreation and waterbirds, representing potential conflicts, ranged from 0.8% in winter on water to 27.7% in summer on the coast. The results revealed significant negative effects between recreational activities and abundance of waterbirds during spring and summer on the water. The results also indicate that most recreational activities use areas with no or low densities of waterbirds. Successful coastal and marine planning requires application of management tools that include educational and interpretative initiatives to enhance coexistence. However, for detailed management, more studies are urgently needed of spatiotemporal patterns, adaptations, conflicts and coexistence between recreational activity and waterbirds. Management implications The results support integrated planning and management of water-based recreation in conjunction with waterbirds by: -Providing spatially explicit year-round data on recreational and waterbird use of coastal and marine areas.-Obtaining the first ever national overview of potential areas of conflict and of possibilities for coexistence between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds.-Identifying specific local areas in need of management action and more detailed studies of effects and impacts of coastal and marine recreation on waterbirds.

AB - Coastal zones are important for recreational activities and waterbirds. However, recreational activities may have negative implications for birdlife, which calls for balancing of both types of use by integrated coastal and marine planning and management. Successful integrated management and planning require spatiotemporal knowledge about the species needing protection and the outdoor recreation activities. This paper examines water-oriented outdoor recreation in Denmark in terms of activities, seasonality and geographical distribution, and presents a national screening of spatiotemporal overlap between coastal and marine recreational activities and waterbirds based on 10,291 responses and 6,499 geographical positions. In total 77.6% of the Danish population participated in water-oriented outdoor recreation activities at least once within a year. The most frequent activities were to move along or stay on the coast/shore (63.9%), to bathe and swim (34.4%) and to observe nature and wildlife (20.3%). Overlap between recreation and waterbirds, representing potential conflicts, ranged from 0.8% in winter on water to 27.7% in summer on the coast. The results revealed significant negative effects between recreational activities and abundance of waterbirds during spring and summer on the water. The results also indicate that most recreational activities use areas with no or low densities of waterbirds. Successful coastal and marine planning requires application of management tools that include educational and interpretative initiatives to enhance coexistence. However, for detailed management, more studies are urgently needed of spatiotemporal patterns, adaptations, conflicts and coexistence between recreational activity and waterbirds. Management implications The results support integrated planning and management of water-based recreation in conjunction with waterbirds by: -Providing spatially explicit year-round data on recreational and waterbird use of coastal and marine areas.-Obtaining the first ever national overview of potential areas of conflict and of possibilities for coexistence between coastal and marine recreation and waterbirds.-Identifying specific local areas in need of management action and more detailed studies of effects and impacts of coastal and marine recreation on waterbirds.

KW - Breeding birds

KW - Ecosystem services

KW - Marine planning

KW - Moulting birds

KW - Outdoor recreation

KW - PPGIS

U2 - 10.1016/j.jort.2021.100399

DO - 10.1016/j.jort.2021.100399

M3 - Journal article

VL - 35

JO - Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism

JF - Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism

SN - 2213-0780

ER -

ID: 271755779