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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Birdwatching is one of the fastest growing sectors of ecotourism. Managing this nature-based
activity requires understanding birdwatchers’ attitudes and behaviour towards the natural
environment. This paper proposes assessing these attitudes and the link to behavioural
intentions by combining the New Environmental Paradigm (NEP) with a criterion-based
segmentation method, the chi-squared automatic interaction detector (CHAID). This
methodology was applied through a survey questionnaire to birdwatchers in the Ria Formosa
Natural Park, a wetland located in South Portugal. The amount birdwatchers were willing to pay
for an improvement in the environmental quality of the site, a behavioural intention variable,
was used as the criterion in the CHAID analysis. Two birdwatcher segments willing to pay above
average were identified and labelled as ‘environmental stewards’ and ‘birdwatching fans’. A key
result that emerged from our study is that the NEP score is not a significant predictor of the
willingness to pay for environmental improvement in the CHAID analysis. Hence, there is a
missing link, as pro-environmental attitudes do not translate into pro-environmental
behavioural intentions.
Description
Keywords
Birdwatching Environmental attitudes Environmental behaviour New Environmental Paradigm CHAID
Citation
Publisher
Routledge