Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of Extremadura

The use of natural protected areas has been analyzed abundantly in the relevant literature, although on many occasions these areas are studied from the viewpoint of their role as a tourist destination in themselves, while neglecting their role as a tourist attraction that can be visited from the mai...

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Main Authors: José Manuel Sánchez Martín, Juan Ignacio Rengifo Gallego, Luz María Martín Delgado
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-12-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/12/4853
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spelling doaj-9b58816567d647b9bb62eccaa444bd052020-11-24T22:18:47ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-12-011012485310.3390/su10124853su10124853Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of ExtremaduraJosé Manuel Sánchez Martín0Juan Ignacio Rengifo Gallego1Luz María Martín Delgado2Faculty of Business and Tourism, University of Extremadura, 10071 Caceres, SpainFaculty of Letters, University of Extremadura, 10071 Caceres, SpainFaculty of Business and Tourism, University of Extremadura, 10071 Caceres, SpainThe use of natural protected areas has been analyzed abundantly in the relevant literature, although on many occasions these areas are studied from the viewpoint of their role as a tourist destination in themselves, while neglecting their role as a tourist attraction that can be visited from the main destination of their stay. In certain specific areas, as in the case of Extremadura, protected areas are often a complementary destination for visitors who are staying in popular tourist hubs. This study is based on data from 4 different spaces (with different degrees in their status as protected areas) about the flow of tourists they generate at the destination. In light of the data, this paper identifies the 41 towns and villages with the most tourists, later to determine their mobility towards natural protected areas. Information was collected from almost 14,000 surveys that were filled at 52 tourist offices. This information allowed us to map the flow of tourists from their places of stay to the protected areas analyzed here, which resulted in the mapping of relevant networks by means of a Geographic Information System following the criterion of shortest path available. The results here clearly demonstrate that each area has a varying capacity to attract visitors, although in a large proportion of cases, the 60-min isochrone is a boundary beyond which the number of visitors drops significantly.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/12/4853protected natural areasExtremaduratourist flowmobility at the destination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author José Manuel Sánchez Martín
Juan Ignacio Rengifo Gallego
Luz María Martín Delgado
spellingShingle José Manuel Sánchez Martín
Juan Ignacio Rengifo Gallego
Luz María Martín Delgado
Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of Extremadura
Sustainability
protected natural areas
Extremadura
tourist flow
mobility at the destination
author_facet José Manuel Sánchez Martín
Juan Ignacio Rengifo Gallego
Luz María Martín Delgado
author_sort José Manuel Sánchez Martín
title Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of Extremadura
title_short Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of Extremadura
title_full Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of Extremadura
title_fullStr Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of Extremadura
title_full_unstemmed Tourist Mobility at the Destination Toward Protected Areas: The Case-Study of Extremadura
title_sort tourist mobility at the destination toward protected areas: the case-study of extremadura
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-12-01
description The use of natural protected areas has been analyzed abundantly in the relevant literature, although on many occasions these areas are studied from the viewpoint of their role as a tourist destination in themselves, while neglecting their role as a tourist attraction that can be visited from the main destination of their stay. In certain specific areas, as in the case of Extremadura, protected areas are often a complementary destination for visitors who are staying in popular tourist hubs. This study is based on data from 4 different spaces (with different degrees in their status as protected areas) about the flow of tourists they generate at the destination. In light of the data, this paper identifies the 41 towns and villages with the most tourists, later to determine their mobility towards natural protected areas. Information was collected from almost 14,000 surveys that were filled at 52 tourist offices. This information allowed us to map the flow of tourists from their places of stay to the protected areas analyzed here, which resulted in the mapping of relevant networks by means of a Geographic Information System following the criterion of shortest path available. The results here clearly demonstrate that each area has a varying capacity to attract visitors, although in a large proportion of cases, the 60-min isochrone is a boundary beyond which the number of visitors drops significantly.
topic protected natural areas
Extremadura
tourist flow
mobility at the destination
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/12/4853
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AT juanignaciorengifogallego touristmobilityatthedestinationtowardprotectedareasthecasestudyofextremadura
AT luzmariamartindelgado touristmobilityatthedestinationtowardprotectedareasthecasestudyofextremadura
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