Spatial patterns and economic contributions of mining and tourism in biodiversity hotspots: A case study in China

Mining activities and tourism are both growing fast in biodiversity intense areas globally. However, the dynamic and interactions between mining and tourism when they both occur in biodiversity hotspots, and how they together may impact the economy and environment in these biodiversity rich areas, r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological economics 2011-06, Vol.70 (8), p.1492-1498
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Ganlin, Zhou, Weiqi, Ali, Saleem
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container_title Ecological economics
container_volume 70
creator Huang, Ganlin
Zhou, Weiqi
Ali, Saleem
description Mining activities and tourism are both growing fast in biodiversity intense areas globally. However, the dynamic and interactions between mining and tourism when they both occur in biodiversity hotspots, and how they together may impact the economy and environment in these biodiversity rich areas, remain unclear. This paper examined how the two industries interact in terms of their economic contributions and spatial patterns in a biodiversity hotspot, Yunnan, China. We used correlation analyses to measure the relationships between mining activities, tourism visits and local gross domestic productions. We also employed a distance-based technique to investigate the nature of any dependency between mining and tourism sites. Results showed that mining activities tend to be in relatively fluent areas while tourism tends to occur in less developed areas. Our results showed that the location of tourism and mining sites are likely to be close to one another but the two industries usually perform better economically when they are apart from each other. These findings can provide insights on how mining and tourism together may impact the economy and environment in biodiversity rich areas, and provide important information for managers and planners on balancing mining and tourism development in these areas. ► Mining is more active in fluent areas while tourism occurs in less developed areas. ► Mining and tourism sites tend to locate closer to one another. ► Areas rarely have both industries perform well in terms of economic contributions.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2011.03.010
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source RePEc; PAIS Index; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Biodiversity
Biodiversity Economic contribution Tourism Mining Spatial pattern GIS China
China
China (People's Republic)
Correlation
Ecology
Economic contribution
Economic performance
Economics
Geographical information systems
GIS
Gross domestic product
Industry
Location
Mining
Mining industry
Planners
Production
Regional analysis
Spatial analysis
Spatial pattern
Tourism
title Spatial patterns and economic contributions of mining and tourism in biodiversity hotspots: A case study in China
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