Authors:
Luís Monteiro
and
Pedro Cabral
Affiliation:
NOVA Information Management School (NOVA IMS), Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Campus de Campolide, 1070-312 Lisbon, Portugal
Keyword(s):
Recreation Ecology, Informal Trail, Landscape Fragmentation, Recreation Impacts, Volunteered Geographic Information.
Abstract:
Informal trails represent an important visitor-related impact on the natural resources of recreational and protected areas by compacting soil, changing vegetation composition, moving wildlife, altering the hydrological cycle, and fragmenting landscapes. This paper develops an approach to assess the extent of the informal trails network and their trail-based impacts in a protected area within the Lisbon Metropolitan Area, Portugal. A total of 28.911,254 km of Volunteered Geographic Information tracks were collected from a fitness and travel web platform. Spatial analysis was performed to assess the extent of the informal infrastructure, and landscape metrics were used to understand the diversity of trail-based fragmentation across the area. A total of 669,6 km were mapped as potential informal trails, hiking being the most popular activity using this infrastructure. Approximately 58% of higher protection areas have been fragmented by informal trails development, representing a loss in
the size and integrity of endangered habitat. The proposed approach allowed to produce a significant coverage of information about the levels of impact from informal trails at the landscape scale using a minimal amount of resources. Further work is recommended to validate results at the local scale using onsite trail-based assessments.
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