Conceptualizing and Measuring Demand for Recreation on National Forests

Conceptualizing and Measuring Demand for Recreation on National Forests

Author: Brian E. Garber-Yonts

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 46

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This analysis examines the problem of measuring demand for recreation on national forests and other public lands. Current measures of recreation demand in Forest Service resource assessments and planning emphasize population-level participation rates and activity-based economic values for visitor days. Alternative measures and definitions of recreation demand are presented, including formal economic demand and multiattribute preferences. Recreation assessments from national-level Renewable Resources Planning Act Assessments to site-level demand studies are reviewed to identify methods used for demand analysis at different spatial scales. A finding throughout the multiple scales of analysis, with the exception of site-level studies, is that demand measures are not integrated with supply measures. Supply analyses, in the context of resource assessments, have taken the form of mapped spatial inventories of recreation resources on the national forests, based on the classification of recreational settings according to the opportunities they produce (e.g., the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum). As such, integration of demand analysis with these measures of supply requires measuring the demand for recreational settings. To support management and planning decisions, recreation demand analysis must also permit projection of changes in visitation at multiple scales as changes in management and policy alter recreational settings, and as the demographics and behavior of the user base changes through time. Although this is currently being done through many formal economic studies of site demand, methods are needed that scale up to higher levels of spatial aggregation. Several areas for research, development and application of improved methods for demand analysis are identified, and improved methods for spatially explicit models of recreation visitation and demand are identified as a priority area for research.


Updated Outdoor Recreation Use Values on National Forests and Other Public Lands

Updated Outdoor Recreation Use Values on National Forests and Other Public Lands

Author: John B. Loomis

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 36

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This report summarizes more than 30 years of the literature on net economic value of outdoor recreation on public lands. The report provides average net willingness to pay or consumer surplus per day for 30 recreation activities at the national level. Values per day by recreation activity are also presented by census region of the United States. Detailed tables provide the average value per day as well as the standard error for calculating confidence intervals. Guidance for using these values in performing benefit transfer to unstudied sites is also provided. The report provides a link to a Web site where the spreadsheet that underlies the averages calculated in this report is available.


Economics of Outdoor Recreation

Economics of Outdoor Recreation

Author: Marion Clawson

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-10-18

Total Pages: 353

ISBN-13: 113598994X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book is one of the first to supply the means for evaluating recreational resources in economic terms. Originally published in 1967.


Area-specific Recreation Use Estimation Using the National Visitor Use Monitoring Program Data

Area-specific Recreation Use Estimation Using the National Visitor Use Monitoring Program Data

Author: Eric M. White

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 28

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Estimates of national forest recreation use are available at the national, regional, and forest levels via the USDA Forest Service National Visitor Use Monitoring (NVUM) program. In some resource planning and management applications, analysts desire recreation use estimates for subforest areas within an individual national forest or for subforest areas that combine portions of several national forests. In this research note we have detailed two approaches whereby the NVUM sampling data may be used to estimate recreation use for a subforest area within a single national forest or for a subforest area combining portions of more than one national forest. The approaches differ in their data requirements, complexity, and assumptions. In the "new forest" approach, recreation use is estimated by using NVUM data obtained only from NVUM interview sites within the area of interest. In the "all-forest information" approach, recreation use is estimated by using sample data gathered on all portions of the national forest(s) that contain the area of interest.