Using nature's beauty as a tourist draw can
boost conservation in China's valued panda preserves, but it isn't an automatic
ticket out of poverty for the human habitants, a unique long-term study shows
The policy hitch: Often those who benefit
most from nature-based tourism endeavors are people who already have resources.
The truly impoverished have a harder time breaking into the tourism business.
Wei
Liu's study, published in the April 25 edition of PLoS One, looks at nearly a
decade of burgeoning tourism in the Wolong Nature Reserve in southwestern
China.
China,
like many areas in the world, is banking on tourism over farming to preserve
fragile animal habitat while allowing people to thrive. But until now, no one
has taken a close look at the long-term implications for people economically.
Liu is
a PhD student in the Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability at
Michigan State University. He and his colleagues took advantage of the center's
15-year history of work in Wolong -- which they call the "excellent
laboratory" -- to study the complex interactions of humans and nature.
"This
study shows the power of having comprehensive long-term data to understand how
everything works together," Liu said. "This is the first time we've
been able to put it together to understand how changes are being made."
"Drivers
and Socioeconomic Impacts of Tourism Participation in Protected Areas" is
co-authored by Christine Vogt, professor of community, agriculture, recreation
and resource studies; research associate Junyan Luo; Guangming He, research
assistant; Kenneth Frank, professor of environmental and natural resources
economics and fisheries and wildlife; and Jianguo "Jack" Liu, Rachel
Carson Chair in Sustainability. All but Vogt are members of in CSIS, of which
Jack Liu is director.
Wei Liu
and his colleagues followed 220 families in Wolong from 1999 to 2007 as they
rode the wave of change in an area shifting from farming to bringing in
tourists who both want to see are land of the giant pandas as well as
ecological beauty. That wave was abruptly stopped in 2008 with the massive
earthquake whose damage to roads and buildings still impedes business
development.
China,
Wei Liu said, has a political structure that heavily favors social connections.
The group studied the impact of having resources in Wolong. Already having money,
being educated, having relationships with governmental officials greatly
increased a person's chances of being successful in nature-based tourism.
Lacking
these resources made it harder, which is significant since many of China's
programs and initiatives aim to lift people out of poverty.
"The
policies haven't yet reached their full potential," Wei Liu said.
"But now we have the data to show what's happening.
An
interesting piece of the research was learning that people who are engaged in
tourism trade more likely to acknowledge the tradeoffs between tourism
development and conservation. Wei said they acknowledged that tourism did
increase noise, traffic congestion and disturbance to wildlife.
"People
in tourism have a lot of knowledge of where tourists go in the wild and what
they bring," Wei Liu said.
Wei Liu
said this research can help China -- and others around the world -- with the
next steps of policy to balance tourism with habitat management. The area is
working hard to rebuild from the earthquake, just as other developing tourism
areas are challenged by natural disasters. The study, he and his colleagues
say, can point to opportunities to improve policies.
The
research was funded by the National Science Foundation and National Institutes
of Health. Jack Liu's research also is supported by MSU AgBioResearch.
ScienceDaily
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