Accounting for the recreation benefits of the Flemish Natura 2000 network through landscape preferences and estimated spending

This paper describes the methods used to produce accounts for the recreational value of Natura 2000 areas in Flanders, Belgium. First, a biophysical account of recreation supply and demand is compiled and mapped. Demand is based on data for green visits per year per inhabitant and covers both recreation and nature-based tourism. It distinguishes local walking trips, local cycling, recreation trips with pre-transport and visits by tourists. The number of green visits is based on a combination of yearly statistics (for tourism, day trips) and irregular surveys (for local visits). The supply acco... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Leo De Nocker
Inge Liekens
Els Verachtert
Jeremy De Valck
Jan Staes
Dirk Vrebos
Steven Broekx
Dokumenttyp: Text
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Schlagwörter: Land use and environmental planning / Environment and resource economics / Recreation / leisure and tourism geography / ecosystem service recreation / monetary valuation / number of visits / physical account
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26704754
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/10779/cqu.23551710.v1

This paper describes the methods used to produce accounts for the recreational value of Natura 2000 areas in Flanders, Belgium. First, a biophysical account of recreation supply and demand is compiled and mapped. Demand is based on data for green visits per year per inhabitant and covers both recreation and nature-based tourism. It distinguishes local walking trips, local cycling, recreation trips with pre-transport and visits by tourists. The number of green visits is based on a combination of yearly statistics (for tourism, day trips) and irregular surveys (for local visits). The supply account is based on modelling predicted visits. The annual visits per inhabitant are attributed to ecosystems using a green visit prediction model that uses the extent and condition accounts related to availability of green-blue areas, accessibility, the attractive potential of landscapes for informal recreation (extent and condition accounts), residence and distance decay functions for different recreation types.