posted on 2021-07-20, 16:57authored byDi YangDi Yang, Yaqian He, Anni Yang, Jue Yang, rongting xu, Han Qiu
Parks
is an essential element in the environment serve for people physical and mental
wellbeing. Especially in 2020, people's health has suffered a great crisis
under the dual effects of the COVID 19 pandemic and the extensive, severe
wildfire in the western and center United State. People had changed their
mobility to obtain the recreational opportunities. The parks offer more safer
recreation opportunity for people to keep health during this crisis time. This
research analyzes spatial and temporal variation on people’s mobility including
number of visitors, dwell time, and travel distance to the park under the
impact of confluence of two major crises. we applied Geographically and
Temporally Weighted Regression (GTWR) Models to explore how the COVID19 and
wildfire factor affected on human recreation behaviors and visitations to parks
during June – September 2020. The findings indicated that the overall trend of
visitation for the park decrease under impact of COVID pandemic and wildfire.
In addition, people tended to travel closer from home to parks and spend less
time there when more COVID19 cases were reported. However, with the lifted
stay-at-home restriction and national park reopen, people travel more distance
to the national park (e.g., Yellowstone) under the COVID case peak in June 2020.
Moreover, people shorten the time and traveled a long distance to park in the
southwest of study area during non-wildfire season (June -July), and then to
the whole study area during the wildfire season (August-September). These
findings shed new light on the how human mobility to the park during the
pandemic and wildfire crisis, which complements practical research on physical
activity, ecosystem services, and public health.