Authors
Birgit Bednar-Friedl, Doris A. Behrens, Michael Getzner
Publication date
2012/5/1
Journal
Environmental and Resource Economics
Volume
52
Issue
1
Pages
1-22
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
To enable visitors to enjoy nature while protecting endangered species is the key challenge for national parks around the world. In our optimal dynamic control model, a park management maximizes tourism revenues and conservation benefits net of control costs by choosing optimal dynamic levels of conservation and visitor management. The optimization is constrained by an extended food chain model representing species-habitat-visitor interactions. We illustrate for a game bird in an Alpine national park that ecotourism can indeed lead to ecosystem degradation when the park management is more concerned about increasing tourism revenues than about achieving the conservation target and if the endangered species is unknown to most visitors. If, however, the park management is well aware of the potentially negative consequences of ecotourism and hence cares for species conservation, limited …
Total citations
20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202332213123414
Scholar articles
B Bednar-Friedl, DA Behrens, M Getzner - Environmental and Resource Economics, 2012