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Wilderness Visitors and Recreation Impacts - Baseline Data Available for Twentieth Century Conditions (Paperback)
Loot Price: R452
Discovery Miles 4 520
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Wilderness Visitors and Recreation Impacts - Baseline Data Available for Twentieth Century Conditions (Paperback)
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Loot Price R452
Discovery Miles 4 520
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The Wilderness Act of 1964 established a National Wilderness
Preservation System (NWPS) "to secure for the American people of
present and future generations the benefits of an enduring resource
of wilderness." The Act states that wilderness areas shall be
administered "for the use and enjoyment of the American people in
such manner as will leave them unimpaired for future use and
enjoyment as wilderness." Moreover, it is the responsibility of
each agency that administers wilderness to preserve each area's
"wilderness character." Since 1964, more than 100 pieces of
legislation have created an NWPS of over 100 million acres, in well
over 600 individual wildernesses, administered by the U.S.
Department of the Interior's Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Fish
and Wildlife Service (FWS), and National Park Service (NPS); and
the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service (FS). To
provide for the use and enjoyment of these areas, while preserving
their wilderness character, it is important for management agencies
to monitor wilderness recreation visitors and the impacts they
cause. Some people state that the Wilderness Act mandates that
recreation impacts not be allowed to increase following wilderness
designation (Worf 2001). Ideally, baseline conditions should be
inventoried at the time each area is designated as wilderness and
added to the NWPS, and then periodically monitored in the future to
assess trends in conditions and the efficacy of existing recreation
management programs. Such data will become increasingly valuable to
future attempts to evaluate trends in the wilderness character of
each area in the NWPS. Although baseline recreation conditions have
been inventoried in many wildernesses, such data are lacking in
many others. Moreover, the distribution of wildernesses with
baseline recreation data is not equitable across the nation or the
four agencies that manage wilderness. This report is an assessment
of Wilderness Visitors and Recreation Impacts: Baseline Data
Available for Twentieth Century Conditions David N. Cole Vita
Wright the status of baseline recreation monitoring data for all
wildernesses in the NWPS at the end of the twentieth century. It
documents the proportion of the NWPS that has baseline data on
recreation visitors and impacts, which wildernesses have this data,
and where they are located. It identifies the types of data that
have been collected, the types of sampling designs that have been
employed, and how and where data have been stored. This compilation
should help researchers identify wildernesses where trends can be
assessed and help wilderness managers identify other managers who
might be contacted about how to initiate and implement new studies.
The data listed in this report are all we will ever have to gain
perspective on the condition of designated wilderness in the
twentieth century regarding recreation visitors and impacts.
Because managers and the interested public, in future decades and
centuries, will want to know what these places were like, these
data will become increasingly valuable. Although some of the data
are published in reports or have been carefully archived, most are
stored on paper files in ranger offices, where they are vulnerable
to loss. We strongly encourage agency personnel to recognize the
future value of this data and invest in archiving it in such a
manner that its perpetuation is ensured. These data could be the
basis for valuable assessments of recreation and impact trends
across the NWPS. This report begins with an overview of the status
of recreation-related monitoring across the NWPS. Three types of
studies are surveyed: those that provide (1) campsite impact data,
(2) trail impact data, and (3) information about visitor
characteristics.
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