Outdoor recreation is increasingly recognised for its deleterious effects on wildlife individuals and populations. However, planners and natural resource managers lack robust scientific recommendations for the design of recreation infrastructure and management of recreation activities. We reviewed 38 years of research on the effect of non-consumptive recreation on wildlife to attempt to identify effect thresholds or the point at which recreation begins to exhibit behavioural or physiological change to wildlife. We found that 53 of 330 articles identified a quantitative threshold. The majority of threshold articles focused on bird or mammal species and measured the distance to people or to a trail. Threshold distances varied substantially wi...
There is widespread evidence that human disturbance affects wildlife behavior, but long-term populat...
With rapid increases in outdoor recreation, and mounting evidence of impacts to wildlife, public lan...
Nature based recreation such as wildlife viewing, hiking, running, cycling, canoeing, horse riding a...
Outdoor recreation is increasingly recognised for its deleterious effects on wildlife individuals an...
This project would not have been possible without the support from the Carnegie Trust, a James Hutto...
Outdoor recreation is a known source of disturbance to many wildlife populations. We systematically ...
Outdoor recreation benefits local economies, environmental education, and public health and wellbein...
Studies have indicated that non-consumptive outdoor recreation may affect wildlife. Thus, as the na...
There is widespread evidence that human disturbance affects wildlife behavior, but long-term populat...
Humans impact wildlife in numerous ways. The most serious being direct habitat destruction due to th...
Wildland recreation that does not involve animal harvests (non‐consumptive recreation) often influen...
Outdoor recreational activities are increasing worldwide and occur at high frequency especially clos...
Abstract Human activity affects plant and animal populations across local to global scales, and the ...
Humans and wildlife interact in multifaceted ways on public lands with both positive and negative ou...
Outdoor recreation is increasing rapidly on public lands, with potential consequences for wildlife c...
There is widespread evidence that human disturbance affects wildlife behavior, but long-term populat...
With rapid increases in outdoor recreation, and mounting evidence of impacts to wildlife, public lan...
Nature based recreation such as wildlife viewing, hiking, running, cycling, canoeing, horse riding a...
Outdoor recreation is increasingly recognised for its deleterious effects on wildlife individuals an...
This project would not have been possible without the support from the Carnegie Trust, a James Hutto...
Outdoor recreation is a known source of disturbance to many wildlife populations. We systematically ...
Outdoor recreation benefits local economies, environmental education, and public health and wellbein...
Studies have indicated that non-consumptive outdoor recreation may affect wildlife. Thus, as the na...
There is widespread evidence that human disturbance affects wildlife behavior, but long-term populat...
Humans impact wildlife in numerous ways. The most serious being direct habitat destruction due to th...
Wildland recreation that does not involve animal harvests (non‐consumptive recreation) often influen...
Outdoor recreational activities are increasing worldwide and occur at high frequency especially clos...
Abstract Human activity affects plant and animal populations across local to global scales, and the ...
Humans and wildlife interact in multifaceted ways on public lands with both positive and negative ou...
Outdoor recreation is increasing rapidly on public lands, with potential consequences for wildlife c...
There is widespread evidence that human disturbance affects wildlife behavior, but long-term populat...
With rapid increases in outdoor recreation, and mounting evidence of impacts to wildlife, public lan...
Nature based recreation such as wildlife viewing, hiking, running, cycling, canoeing, horse riding a...