Bibliometric evaluation of global research on eco-tourism

  • Published: 21 November 2023

Cite this article

eco tourism research topics

  • Han Lin 1 ,
  • Yan Zhu 2 ,
  • Zhoubao Sun   ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0003-4092-8893 1 ,
  • Pingping Wu 1 &
  • Jinjin Zhang 3  

192 Accesses

1 Altmetric

Explore all metrics

Eco-tourism has been widely regarded as an innovative paradigm for the conservation and sustainable development and a new niche within the tourism industry. Studying eco-tourism from a bibliometric perspective can provide insights into the trends and hot issues in eco-tourism research, and eco-tourism practice, management, and academic development provide important theoretical support and practical guidance. Despite mounting concerns from academics and practitioners, the current research on eco-tourism is still fragmented. To fulfill the gaps in the current understanding of this topic, this study tries to explore and analyze global research trends and frontiers on eco-tourism in the past decades using a bibliometric approach. A total of 3982 publications with 61,148 references satisfied the search scheme. The results clearly exhibit the research evolution trajectory, including the publication outputs, geographical and periodical distribution, distribution of journal, authors, and institutions, as well as burst, co-occurrence, and co-citation analysis. The findings roundly reveal topic hot spots, novel ideas, and sustainable development trends of eco-tourism in a global context which presents an opportunity to grasp the march of knowledge and show the ways for the future development.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price includes VAT (Russian Federation)

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Rent this article via DeepDyve

Institutional subscriptions

eco tourism research topics

Similar content being viewed by others

eco tourism research topics

Past, current, and future perspectives on eco-tourism: a bibliometric review between 2001 and 2018

eco tourism research topics

Mapping Research Trends on Smart Tourism: A Bibliometric Analysis

eco tourism research topics

A bibliometric analysis and systematic literature review of tourism-environmental degradation nexus

Agyeiwaah, E., McKercher, B., & Suntikul, W. (2017). Identifying core indicators of sustainable tourism: A path forward? Tourism Management Perspectives, 24 , 26–33.

Article   Google Scholar  

Balmford, A., Beresford, J., Green, J., Naidoo, R., Walpole, M., & Manica, A. (2009). A global perspective on trends in nature-based tourism. PLoS Biology, 7 (6), e1000144.

Baral, N. (2014). Evaluation and resilience of ecotourism in the Annapurna Conservation Area, Nepal. Environmental Conservation, 41 (1), 84–92.

Basariya, S. R., & Ahmed, R. R. (2019). The Influence of ‘Adventure Tourism Activities’ in promoting tourism business in mountain stations. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Management, 8 (2), 1–10.

Google Scholar  

Battaglia, M., Daddi, T., & Rizzi, F. (2012). Sustainable tourism planning and consultation: Evidence from the project INTER. ECO. TUR. European Planning Studies, 20 (2), 193–211.

Bell, C., & Ruhanen, L. (2016). The diffusion and adoption of eco-innovations amongst tourism businesses: The role of the social system. Tourism Recreation Research, 41 (3), 291–301.

Blum, N. (2008). Environmental education in Costa Rica: Building a framework for sustainable development? International Journal of Educational Development, 28 (3), 348–358.

Boley, B. B., McGehee, N. G., & Hammett, A. T. (2017). Importance-performance analysis (IPA) of sustainable tourism initiatives: The resident perspective. Tourism Management, 58 , 66–77.

Buckley, R. (2000). Neat trends: Current issues in nature, eco-and adventure tourism. International Journal of Tourism Research, 2 (6), 437–444.

Carlisle, S., Kunc, M., Jones, E., & Tiffin, S. (2013). Supporting innovation for tourism development through multi-stakeholder approaches: Experiences from Africa. Tourism Management, 35 , 59–69.

Ceballos, L, H. 1987. The future of ecotourism. Mexico Journal , 13–14.

Chen, C. (2004). Searching for intellectual turning points: Progressive knowledge domain visualization. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 101 (S1), 5303–5310.

Article   CAS   Google Scholar  

Chen, W. J., & Liaw, S. C. (2012). What is the value of eco-tourism? An evaluation of forested trails for community residents and visitors. Tourism Economics, 18 (4), 871–885.

Gallagher, A. J., & Hammerschlag, N. (2011). Global shark currency: The distribution, frequency, and economic value of shark ecotourism. Current Issues in Tourism, 14 (8), 797–812.

Grilli, G., Tyllianakis, E., Luisetti, T., Ferrini, S., & Turner, R. K. (2021). Prospective tourist preferences for sustainable tourism development in Small Island Developing States. Tourism Management, 82 , 104178.

Han, M., Lin, H., Wang, J., Wang, Y., & Jiang, W. (2019). Turning corporate environmental ethics into firm performance: The role of green marketing programs. Business Strategy and the Environment, 28 (6), 929–938.

Hoefle, S. W. (2016). Multi-functionality, juxtaposition and conflict in the Central Amazon: Will tourism contribute to rural livelihoods and save the rainforest? Journal of Rural Studies, 44 , 24–36.

Holling, C. S. (1973). Resilience and stability of ecological systems. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 4 (1), 1–23.

Hunt, C. A., Durham, W. H., Driscoll, L., & Honey, M. (2015). Can ecotourism deliver real economic, social, and environmental benefits? A study of the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 23 (3), 339–357.

Hunter, C., & Shaw, J. (2007). The ecological footprint as a key indicator of sustainable tourism. Tourism Management, 28 (1), 46–57.

Ioppolo, G., Saija, G., & Salomone, R. (2013). From coastal management to environmental management: The sustainable eco-tourism program for the mid-western coast of Sardinia (Italy). Land Use Policy, 31 , 460–471.

Jacobson, S. K., & Robles, R. (1992). Ecotourism, sustainable development, and conservation education: Development of a tour guide training program in Tortuguero, Costa Rica. Environmental Management, 16 (6), 701–713.

Jones, G., & Spadafora, A. (2017). Creating Ecotourism in Costa Rica, 1970–2000. Enterprise & Society, 18 (1), 146–183.

Ke, L. (2012). New development direction on worse ecological system resource of china eco-tourism. Energy Procedia, 14 , 445–450.

Kiss, A. (2004). Is community-based ecotourism a good use of biodiversity conservation funds? Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 19 (5), 232–237.

Lee, J. H. (2019). Conflict mapping toward ecotourism facility foundation using spatial Q methodology. Tourism Management, 72 , 69–77.

Lin, H., Zeng, S. X., Ma, H. Y., Qi, G. Y., & Tam, V. W. (2014). Can political capital drive corporate green innovation? Lessons from China. Journal of Cleaner Production, 64 , 63–72.

Lin, H., Zeng, S., Ma, H., Zeng, R., & Tam, V. W. (2017). An indicator system for evaluating megaproject social responsibility. International Journal of Project Management, 35 (7), 1415–1426.

Luo, J., & Zhang, M. (2011). Route choice of low-carbon industry for global climate change: An issue of China tourism reform. Energy Procedia, 5 , 2283–2288.

Ma, B., Cai, Z., Zheng, J., & Wen, Y. (2019). Conservation, ecotourism, poverty, and income inequality—A case study of nature reserves in Qinling, China. World Development, 115 , 236–244.

Marshall, N. J., Kleine, D. A., & Dean, A. J. (2012). CoralWatch: Education, monitoring, and sustainability through citizen science. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 10 (6), 332–334.

Martínez, J. M. G., Martín, J. M. M., Fernández, J. A. S., & Mogorrón-Guerrero, H. (2019). An analysis of the stability of rural tourism as a desired condition for sustainable tourism. Journal of Business Research, 100 , 165–174.

Nepal, R., Al Irsyad, M. I., & Nepal, S. K. (2019). Tourist arrivals, energy consumption and pollutant emissions in a developing economy–implications for sustainable tourism. Tourism Management, 72 , 145–154.

Osman, T., Shaw, D., & Kenawy, E. (2018). Examining the extent to which stakeholder collaboration during ecotourism planning processes could be applied within an Egyptian context. Land Use Policy, 78 , 126–137.

Oviedo-García, M. Á., Castellanos-Verdugo, M., Vega-Vázquez, M., & Orgaz-Agüera, F. (2017). The Mediating roles of the overall perceived value of the ecotourism site and attitudes towards ecotourism in sustainability through the key relationship ecotourism knowledge-ecotourist satisfaction. International Journal of Tourism Research, 19 (2), 203–213.

Pan, S. Y., Gao, M., Kim, H., Shah, K. J., Pei, S. L., & Chiang, P. C. (2018). Advances and challenges in sustainable tourism toward a green economy. Science of the Total Environment, 635 , 452–469.

Phillips, M. R., & House, C. (2009). An evaluation of priorities for beach tourism: Case studies from South Wales, UK. Tourism Management, 30 (2), 176–183.

Powell, R. B., & Ham, S. H. (2008). Can ecotourism interpretation really lead to pro-conservation knowledge, attitudes and behaviour? Evidence from the Galapagos Islands. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 16 (4), 467–489.

Reimer, J. K., & Walter, P. (2013). How do you know it when you see it? Community-based ecotourism in the Cardamom Mountains of southwestern Cambodia. Tourism Management, 34 , 122–132.

Ren, L., Li, J., Li, C., & Dang, P. (2021). Can ecotourism contribute to ecosystem? Evidence from local residents’ ecological behaviors. Science of the Total Environment, 757 , 143814.

Romão, J., Neuts, B., Nijkamp, P., & Shikida, A. (2014). Determinants of trip choice, satisfaction and loyalty in an eco-tourism destination: A modelling study on the Shiretoko Peninsula, Japan. Ecological Economics, 107 , 195–205.

Ruhanen, L. (2019). The prominence of eco in ecotourism experiences: An analysis of post-purchase online reviews. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Management, 39 , 110–116.

Ruiz-Ballesteros, E. (2011). Social-ecological resilience and community-based tourism: An approach from Agua Blanca, Ecuador. Tourism Management, 32 (3), 655–666.

Santarém, F., Campos, J. C., Pereira, P., Hamidou, D., Saarinen, J., & Brito, J. C. (2018). Using multivariate statistics to assess ecotourism potential of water-bodies: A case-study in Mauritania. Tourism Management, 67 , 34–46.

Saxena, G. (2005). Relationships, networks and the learning regions: Case evidence from the Peak District National Park. Tourism Management, 26 (2), 277–289.

Şekercioğlu, Ç. H. (2012). Promoting community-based bird monitoring in the tropics: Conservation, research, environmental education, capacity-building, and local incomes. Biological Conservation, 151 (1), 69–73.

Shasha, Z. T., Geng, Y., Sun, H. P., Musakwa, W., & Sun, L. (2020). Past, current, and future perspectives on eco-tourism: A bibliometric review between 2001 and 2018. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 27 (19), 23514–23528.

Shezan, S. A., Saidur, R., Ullah, K. R., Hossain, A., Chong, W. T., & Julai, S. (2015). Feasibility analysis of a hybrid off-grid wind–DG-battery energy system for the eco-tourism remote areas. Clean Technologies and Environmental Policy, 17 (8), 2417–2430.

Shi, F., Weaver, D., Zhao, Y., Huang, M. F., Tang, C., & Liu, Y. (2019). Toward an ecological civilization: Mass comprehensive ecotourism indications among domestic visitors to a Chinese wetland protected area. Tourism Management, 70 , 59–68.

Solomon, B. D., Corey-Luse, C. M., & Halvorsen, K. E. (2004). The Florida manatee and eco-tourism: Toward a safe minimum standard. Ecological Economics, 50 (1–2), 101–115.

Sun, D., Zeng, S., Lin, H., Meng, X., & Yu, B. (2019). Can transportation infrastructure pave a green way? A city-level examination in China. Journal of Cleaner Production, 226 , 669–678.

Techera, E. J., & Klein, N. (2013). The role of law in shark-based eco-tourism: Lessons from Australia. Marine Policy, 39 , 21–28.

Tseng, M. L., Lin, C., Lin, C. W. R., Wu, K. J., & Sriphon, T. (2019). Ecotourism development in Thailand: Community participation leads to the value of attractions using linguistic preferences. Journal of Cleaner Production, 231 , 1319–1329.

Uddhammar, E. (2006). Development, conservation and tourism: Conflict or symbiosis? Review of International Political Economy, 13 (4), 656–678.

Weaver, D. B. (2005). Comprehensive and minimalist dimensions of ecotourism. Annals of Tourism Research, 32 (2), 439–455.

Weaver, D. B., & Lawton, L. J. (2007). Twenty years on: The state of contemporary ecotourism research. Tourism Management, 28 (5), 1168–1179.

Weaver, D., Tang, C., & Zhao, Y. (2020). Facilitating sustainable tourism by endogenization: China as exemplar. Annals of Tourism Research, 81 , 102890.

Wondirad, A., Tolkach, D., & King, B. (2020). Stakeholder collaboration as a major factor for sustainable ecotourism development in developing countries. Tourism Management, 78 , 104024.

Xu, S., Mingzhu, L., Bu, N., & Pan, S. (2017). Regulatory frameworks for ecotourism: An application of total relationship flow management theorems. Tourism Management, 61 , 321–330.

Yuan, M., Lin, H., Wu, H., Yu, M., Tu, J., & Lü, Y. (2021). Community engagement in public health: A bibliometric mapping of global research. Archives of Public Health, 79 (1), 1–17.

Zhai, Y., Yang, K., Chen, L., Lin, H., Yu, M., & Jin, R. (2023). Digital entrepreneurship: Global maps and trends of research. Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing, 38 (3), 637–655.

Zhang, J. T., Xiang, C., & Li, M. (2012). Integrative ecological sensitivity (IES) applied to assessment of eco-tourism impact on forest vegetation landscape: A case from the Baihua Mountain Reserve of Beijing, China. Ecological Indicators, 18 , 365–370.

Zhang, Z., Sherman, R., Yang, Z., Wu, R., Wang, W., Yin, M., Yang, G., & Ou, X. (2013). Integrating a participatory process with a GIS-based multi-criteria decision analysis for protected area zoning in China. Journal for Nature Conservation, 21 (4), 225–240.

Download references

Acknowledgements

We thank all those that have contributed to our projects over the years, and the reviewers whose critical feedback helped to improve this article.

This study was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (72271126, 61701243, 71771125), Major Project of Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Education Department (21KJA630001, 22KJA630001), Project of the National Audit Research Institute (21XSJB05), and Qinglan Project of Jiangsu Province.

Author information

Authors and affiliations.

School of Engineering Audit, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Public Project Audit, Nanjing Audit University, Nanjing, China

Han Lin, Zhoubao Sun & Pingping Wu

School of Information Engineering, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Public Project Audit, Nanjing Audit University, Nanjing, China

School of Information Engineering, Nanjing Audit University, Nanjing, China

Jinjin Zhang

You can also search for this author in PubMed   Google Scholar

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Zhoubao Sun .

Ethics declarations

Conflict of interest.

The authors declare they have no conflicts of interest.

Additional information

Publisher's note.

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Lin, H., Zhu, Y., Sun, Z. et al. Bibliometric evaluation of global research on eco-tourism. Environ Dev Sustain (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-023-04119-7

Download citation

Received : 06 March 2022

Accepted : 29 October 2023

Published : 21 November 2023

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-023-04119-7

Share this article

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:

Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.

Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative

  • Bibliometric
  • Eco-tourism
  • Sustainable development
  • Sustainability
  • Global research
  • Find a journal
  • Publish with us
  • Track your research

U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

The .gov means it’s official. Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

The site is secure. The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

  • Publications
  • Account settings

Preview improvements coming to the PMC website in October 2024. Learn More or Try it out now .

  • Advanced Search
  • Journal List
  • Springer Nature - PMC COVID-19 Collection

Logo of phenaturepg

Ecotourism and sustainable development: a scientometric review of global research trends

1 Department of Management Science and Engineering, Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin, 150030 China

2 Faculty of Economic and Management, Mudanjiang Normal University, Mudanjiang, 157011 China

Changlin Ao

3 College of Engineering, Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin, 150030 China

Associated Data

The data that support the findings of this study are available from Web of Science.

With the increasing attention and awareness of the ecological environment, ecotourism is becoming ever more popular, but it still brings problems and challenges to the sustainable development of the environment. To solve such challenges, it is necessary to review literature in the field of ecotourism and determine the key research issues and future research directions. This paper uses scientometrics implemented by CiteSpace to conduct an in-depth systematic review of research and development in the field of ecotourism. Two bibliographic datasets were obtained from the Web of Science, including a core dataset and an expanded dataset, containing articles published between 2003 and 2021. Our research shows that ecotourism has been developing rapidly in recent years. The research field of ecotourism spans many disciplines and is a comprehensive interdisciplinary subject. According to the research results, the evolution of ecotourism can be roughly divided into three phases: human disturbance, ecosystem services and sustainable development. It could be concluded that it has entered the third stage of Shneider’s four-stage theory of scientific discipline. The research not only identifies the main clusters and their advance in ecotourism research based on high impact citations and research frontier formed by citations, but also presents readers with new insights through intuitive visual images.

Supplementary Information

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10668-022-02190-0.

Introduction

Ecotourism, which has appeared in academic literature since the late 1980s, is a special form of nature-based tourism that maintains the well-being of the local community while protecting the environment and provides tourists with a satisfying nature experience and enjoyment (Ceballos-Lascuráin, 1996 ; Higgins, 1996 ; Orams, 1995 ). With years of research and development, ecotourism has risen to be a subject of investigation in the field of tourism research (Weaver & Lawton, 2007 ). In 2002, the United Nations declared it the International Year of Ecotourism (IYE), and the professional Journal of Ecotourism was established in the same year.

With the progress and maturity of ecotourism as an academic research field, countless scholars have put forward standards and definitions for ecotourism (Sirakaya et al., 1999 ; Wight, 1993 ). The main objectives of ecotourism emphasize long-term sustainable development (Whitelaw et al., 2014 ), including the conservation of natural resources, the generation of economic income, education, local participation and the promotion of social benefits such as local economic development and infrastructure (Ardoin et al., 2015 ; Coria & Calfucura, 2012 ; Krüger, 2005 ; Oladeji et al., 2021 ; Ross & Wall, 1999 ; Valdivieso et al., 2015 ). It can also boost rural economies and alleviate poverty in developing countries (Snyman, 2017 ; Zhong & Liu, 2017 ).

With unrestricted increasing attention to the ecological environment and the improvement of environmental awareness, ecotourism is becoming ever more prevalent, and the demand for tourism is increasing year by year (CREST, 2019 ). This increase, however, leads to a number of environmental, social and economic challenges in the development of ecotourism. For example, due to the low public awareness of ecotourism, the increase in tourists has brought a series of negative impacts on the local ecological environment, culture and economy, including disrespect for local culture and environmental protection, as well as more infrastructure construction and economic burden to meet the needs of tourists (Ahmad et al., 2018 ; Chiu et al., 2014 ; Shasha et al., 2020 ; Xu et al., 2020 ). Such challenges and contradictions are urgent problems to be tackled by the sustainable development of ecotourism. Especially against the backdrop of the current pandemic, tourism has experienced a severe blow, but climate change and other environmental issues have not been improved (CREST, 2020 ). In this context, facing these challenges and difficulties, it is essential to re-examine the future development path of ecotourism, to explore how government agencies can formulate appropriate management policies while preserving the environment and natural resources to support sustainable tourism development. Accordingly, it is necessary to consult literature in the field of ecotourism to understand the research progress and fundamental research issues, to identify challenges, suitable methods and future research direction of ecotourism.

Some previous reviews of ecotourism offer a preview of research trends in this rapidly developing area. Weaver and Lawton ( 2007 ) provide a comprehensive assessment of the current state and future progress of contemporary ecotourism research, starting with the supply and demand dichotomy of ecotourism, as well as fundamental areas such as quality control, industry, external environment and institutions. Ardoin et al. ( 2015 ) conducted a literature review, analyzing the influence of nature tourism on ecological knowledge, attitudes, behavior and potential research into the future. Niñerola et al. ( 2019 ) used the bibliometric method and VOSviewer to study the papers on sustainable development of tourism in Scopus from 1987 to 2018, including literature landscape and development trends. Shasha et al. ( 2020 ) used bibliometrics and social network analysis to review the research progress of ecotourism from 2001 to 2018 based on the Web of Science database using BibExcel and Gephi and explored the current hot spots and methods of ecotourism research. These reviews have provided useful information for ecotourism research at that time, but cannot reflect the latest research trends and emerging development of ecotourism either of timeliness, data integrity, research themes or methods.

This study aims to reveal the theme pattern, landmark articles and emerging trends in ecotourism knowledge landscape research from macro- to micro-perspectives. Unlike previous literature surveys, from timeliness, our dataset contains articles published between 2003 and 2021, and it will reveal more of the trends that have emerged over the last 3 years. Updating the rapidly developing literature is important as recent discoveries from different areas can fundamentally change collective knowledge (Chen et al., 2012 , 2014a ). To ensure data integrity, two bibliographic datasets were generated from Web of Science, including a core dataset using the topic search and an expanded dataset using the citation expansion method, which is more robust than defining rapidly growing fields using only keyword lists (Chen et al., 2014b ). And from the research theme and method, our review focuses on the area of ecotourism and is instructed by a scientometric method conducted by CiteSpace, an analysis system for visualizing newly developing trends and key changes in scientific literature (Chen et al., 2012 ). Emerging trends are detected based on metrics calculated by CiteSpace, without human intervention or working knowledge of the subject matter (Chen et al., 2012 ). Choosing this approach can cover a more extensive and diverse range of related topics and ensure repeatability of analysis with updated data (Chen et al., 2014b ).

In addition, Shneider’s four-stage theory will be used to interpret the results in this review. According to Shneider’s four-stage theory of scientific discipline (Shneider, 2009 ), the development of a scientific discipline is divided into four stages. Stage I is the conceptualization stage, in which the objects and phenomena of a new discipline or research are established. Stage II is characterized by the development of research techniques and methods that allow researchers to investigate potential phenomena. As a result of methodological advances, there is a further understanding of objects and phenomena in the field of new subjects at this stage. Once the techniques and methods for specific purposes are available, the research enters Stage III, where the investigation is based primarily on the application of the new research method. This stage is productive, in which the research results have considerably enhanced the researchers’ understanding of the research issues and disclosed some unknown phenomena, leading to interdisciplinary convergence or the emergence of new research directions or specialties. The last stage is Stage IV, whose particularity is to transform tacit knowledge into conditional knowledge and generalized knowledge, so as to maintain and transfer the scientific knowledge generated in the first three stages.

The structure of this paper is construed as follows. The second part describes the research methods employed, the scientometric approach and CiteSpace, as well as the data collection. In the third part, the bibliographic landscape of the core dataset is expounded from the macroscopic to the microscopic angle. The fourth part explores the developments and emerging trends in the field of ecotourism based on the expanded dataset and discusses the evolution phase of ecotourism. The final part is the conclusion of this study. Future research of ecotourism is prospected, and the limitations of this study are discussed.

Methods and data collection

Scientometric analyses and citespace.

Scientometrics is a branch of informatics that involves quantitative analysis of scientific literature in order to capture emerging trends and knowledge structures in a particular area of study (Chen et al., 2012 ). Science mapping tools generate interactive visual representations of complex structures by feeding a set of scientific literature through scientometrics and visual analysis tools to highlight potentially important patterns and trends for statistical analysis and visualization exploration (Chen, 2017 ). At present, scientometrics is widely used in many fields of research, and there are also many kinds of scientific mapping software widely used by researchers and analysts, such as VosViewer, SCI2, HistCite, SciMAT, Gephi, Pajek and CiteSpace (Chen, 2011 , 2017 ; Chen et al., 2012 ).

Among these tools, CiteSpace is known for its powerful literature co-citation analysis, and its algorithms and features are constantly being refined as it continues to evolve. CiteSpace is a citation visual analysis software developed under the background of scientometrics and data visualization to analyze the basics that are included in scientific analysis (Chen, 2017 ; Chen et al., 2012 ). It is specialized designed to satisfy the need for systematic review in rapidly changing complicated areas, particularly with the ability to identify and explain emerging trends and transition patterns (Chen et al., 2014a ). It supports multiple types of bibliometric research, such as collaborative network analysis, co-word analysis, author co-citation analysis, document co-citation analysis, and temporal and spatial visualization (Chen, 2017 ). Currently, CiteSpace has been extensively used in more than 60 fields, including computer science, information science, management and medicine (Abad-Segura et al., 2019 ; Chen, 2017 ).

In this paper, we utilize CiteSpace (5.8.R1) to analyze acquired bibliographies of ecotourism to study emerging trends and developments in this field. From macro to micro, from intuitive to complex, from whole to part and from general to special, the writing ideas are adopted. Figure  1 presented the specific research framework of this study.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig1_HTML.jpg

The research framework of this study

Data collection

Typical sources of scientific literature are Web of Science, Scopus and Google Scholar. Considering the quantity and quality of data, the Web of Science database was expected to provide the original data in this research. In order to comprehend the research status and development trends of ecotourism, this study systematically reviewed the ecotourism literature collected on the Web of Science Core Collection. The Web of Science Core Collection facilitates access to the world’s leading scholarly journals, books and proceedings of conferences in the sciences, social sciences, art, and humanities, as well as access to their entire citation network. It mainly includes Science Citation Index Expanded from 2003 to current and Social Sciences Citation Index from 2004 to present. Therefore, the data obtained in this study are from 2003 and were consulted on June 3, 2021.

In the process of data retrieval, it is frequently confronted with the choice between recall rate and precision rate. To address the problem of low recall rate in keyword or topic retrieval, Chen et al. ( 2014a , b ) expanded the retrieval results through ‘citation expansion’ and ‘comprehensive topic search’ strategies. However, when the recall rate is high, the accuracy rate will decrease correspondingly. In practical standpoint, instead of refining and cleaning up the original search results, a simpler and more efficient way is to cluster or skip these unrelated branches. Priority should be placed on ensuring recall rate, and data integrity is more important than data for accuracy. Therefore, two ecotourism documentation datasets, the core dataset and the expanded dataset, were obtained from the Web of Science by using comprehensive topic search and citation expansion method. The latter approach has been proved more robust than using keyword lists only to define fast-growing areas (Chen et al., 2014b ). A key bibliographic landscape is generated based on the core dataset, followed by more thorough research of the expanded dataset.

The core dataset

The core dataset was derived through comprehensive subject retrieval in Web of Science Core Collection. The literature type was selected as an article or review, and the language was English. The period spans 2003 to 2021. The topic search query is composed of three phrases of ecotourism: ‘ ecotour* ’ OR ‘ eco-tour* ’ OR ‘ ecological NEAR/5 tour* ’. The wildcard * is used to capture related variants of words, for example, ecotour, ecotourism, ecotourist and ecotourists. The related records that are requested include finding these terms in the title, abstract or keywords. The query yielded 2991 original unique records.

The expanded dataset

The expanded dataset includes the core dataset and additional records obtained by reference link association founded on the core dataset. The principle of citation expansion is that if an article cites at least one article in the core dataset, we can infer that it is related to the topic (Garfield, 1955 ). The expanded dataset is comprised of 27,172 unique records, including the core dataset and the articles that cited them. Both datasets were used for the following scientometrics analysis.

Bibliographic landscape based on the core dataset

The core dataset consists of a total of 2991 literature from 2003 to 2021. This study utilized the core dataset to conduct an overall understanding of the bibliographic landscape in the field of ecotourism.

Landscape views of core dataset

The distribution of the yearly publication of bibliographic records in the core and expanded datasets is presented in Fig.  2 . It can be observed that the overall number of ecotourism-related publications is on the rise, indicating that the scholarly community is increasingly interested in ecotourism. After 2018, the growth rate increased substantially. And in 2020, the number of publications in the expanded dataset is close to 5000, almost double that of 2017 and 5 times that of 2011. This displays the rapid development of research in the field of ecotourism in recent years, particularly after 2018, more and more researchers began to pay attention to this field, which also echoes the trend of global tourism development and environmental protection. With the increase in personal income, tourism has grown very rapidly, and with it, tourism revenue and tourist numbers, especially in developing states. For instance, the number of domestic tourists in China increased from 2.641 billion in 2011 to 6.06 billion in 2019, and tourism revenue increased from 1930.5 billion RMB in 2011 to 5725.1 billion RMB in 2019 (MCT, 2021 ). However, due to the lack of effective management and frequent human activities, the rapid development of tourism has led to various ecological and environmental problems, which require corresponding solutions (Shasha et al., 2020 ). This has played an active role in promoting the development of ecotourism and triggered a lot of related research. In addition, since 2005, the expanded dataset has contained numerous times as many references as the core dataset, demonstrating the importance of using citation expansion for literature retrieval in scientometric review studies.The data were consulted on June 3, 2021

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig2_HTML.jpg

The distribution of bibliographic records in core and expanded dataset. Note The data were consulted on June 3, 2021

The dual-map overlay of scientific map literature as Fig.  3 shows, against the background of global scientific map from more than 10,000 journals covered by Web of Science, represents the distribution and connections on research bases and application fields across the entire dataset of the research topics (Chen & Leydesdorff, 2014 ). Colored lines are citation links, and numbered headings are cluster labels. On the left side is the journal distribution which cites literature, regarding the field application of ecotourism, mainly covers multiple disciplines such as 3. Ecology, Earth, Marine, 6. Psychology, Education, Health, 7. Veterinary, Animal Science and 10. Economics, Economic and Political. On the right side is the distribution of journals of cited literature, representing the research basis of ecotourism. As can be observed from the figure, ecotourism research is based on at least five disciplines on the right, including 2. Environmental, Toxicology, Nutrition, 7. Psychology, Education, Social, 8. Molecular, Biology, Genetics, 10. Plant, Ecology, Zoology and 12. Economics, Economic, Political. It can be viewed that the research field of ecotourism spans multiple disciplines and is a comprehensive and complex subject. The dual-map overlay provides a global visualization of literature growth of the discipline level.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig3_HTML.jpg

A dual-map overlay of ecotourism literature

The total number of papers issued by a country or an institution reflects its academic focus and overall strength, while centrality indicates the degree of academic cooperation with others and the influence of published papers. The top 15 countries and institutions for the number of ecotourism papers published from 2003 to 2021 are provided in Table ​ Table1. 1 . Similar to the study of Shasha et al. ( 2020 ), the ranking of the top six countries by the number of publications remains unchanged. As can be seen from the table, the USA ranks first in the world, far ahead in both the number of publications and the centrality. China ranks second in global ecotourism publications, followed by Australia, England, South Africa and Canada. While the latest data show that Taiwan (China), Turkey and South Korea appear on the list. Overall, the top 15 countries with the most publications cover five continents, containing a number of developed and developing, which shows that ecotourism research is receiving global attention. In terms of international academic cooperation and impact of ecotourism, Australia and England share second place, Italy and France share fourth place, followed by South Africa and Spain. China’s centrality is relatively low compared to the number of publications, ranking eighth. Academic cooperation between countries is of great significance. Usually, countries with high academic publishing level cooperate closely due to similar research interests. International academic cooperation has enhanced each other’s research capacity and promoted the development of ecotourism research. Therefore, although some countries have entered this list with the publication number, they should attach importance to increase academic cooperation with other countries and improving the international influence of published papers.

The top 15 most productive countries and institutions on ecotourism

The Chinese Academy of Sciences and its university are the most prolific when it draws to institutions’ performance. It is the most important and influential research institute in China, especially in the field of sustainable development science. Australia has four universities on the list, with Griffith University and James Cook University in second and third place. USA also includes four universities, with the University of Florida in fourth place. South Africa, a developing country, gets three universities, with the University of Cape Town and the University of Johannesburg fifth and sixth, respectively. In comparison with previous studies (Shasha et al., 2020 ), Iran and Mexico each have one university in the ranking, replacing two universities in Greece, which means that the importance and influence of developing countries in the field of ecotourism is gradually rising. Based on the above results, it can be summarized that the USA, China, Australia and South Africa are relatively active countries in the field of ecotourism, and their development is also in a relatively leading position.

Most active topics

The foam tree map and the pie chart of the focal topics of ecotourism based on the core dataset generated by Carrot2 through the title of each article is illustrated in Fig.  4 . Developing and developed, case study, protected areas, sustainable tourism, tourism development and developing ecotourism are leading topics in the field of ecotourism research, as well as specific articles under the main topics. The lightweight view generated by Carrot2 provides a reference for the research, and then, co-word analysis is employed to more specifically reflect the topics in the research field.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig4_HTML.jpg

Foam tree map and pie chart of major topics on ecotourism

The topics covered by ecotourism could be exposed by the keywords of the articles in the core dataset. Figure  5 displays the keywords analysis results generated based on the core dataset. From the visualization results in the figure, it can infer that ecotourism, conservation, tourism, management, protected area, impact, biodiversity, sustainability, national park and community are the ten most concerned topics. Distinct colors set out at the time of co-citation keywords first appear, and yellow is generated earlier than red. In addition, Fig.  5 can also reflect the development and emerging topics in the research field, such as China, Mexico, South Africa and other hot countries for ecotourism research; ecosystem service, economic value, climate change, wildlife tourism, rural tourism, forest, marine protected area and other specific research directions; valuation, contingent valuation, choice experiment and other research methods; willingness to pay, preference, benefit, perception, attitude, satisfaction, experience, behavior, motivation, risk, recreation and other specific research issues.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig5_HTML.jpg

A landscape view of keywords based on the core dataset

Emerging trends and developments based on the expanded dataset

The expanded dataset, consisting of 27,172 records, is approximately nine times larger than the core dataset. This research applies the expanded dataset to profoundly explore the emerging trends and developments of ecotourism.

Keywords with citation bursts

Detection of citation bursts can indicate both the scientific community’s interest in published articles and burst keywords as an indicator of emerging tendencies. Figure  6 displays the top 30 keywords with the strongest citation bursts in the expanded dataset. Since 2003, a large number of keywords have exploded. Among them, the strongest bursts include ecotourism, bird, disturbance, reserve, Africa, challenge, sustainable development and strategy. Keywords with citation burst after 2017 are experience, challenge, sustainable development, willingness to pay, perspective, strategy, quality and satisfaction, which have continued to this day. The results indicate dynamic development and emerging trends in research hotspots in the field of ecotourism.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig6_HTML.jpg

Top 30 keywords with the strongest citation bursts

References with citation bursts

Figure  7 sets out the top 30 references in the expanded dataset with citation bursts. The articles with the fastest growing citations can also contribute to describe the dynamics of a field. References with high values in strength column are important milestones of ecotourism research. The two articles with strong citation bursts prior to 2010 focused on the human impact on the environment and animals. West et al. ( 2006 ) discussed the relationship between parks and human beings and the social impact of protected areas, and Köndgen et al. ( 2008 ) studied the decline of endangered great apes caused by a human pandemic virus. The paper with the strongest citation burst in the entire expanded dataset was released by Fairhead et al. ( 2012 ), which looked at ‘green grabbing,’ the appropriation of land and resources for environmental purposes. Milcu et al. ( 2013 ) conducted a semi-quantitative review of publications dealing with cultural ecosystem services with the second strongest citation burst, which concluded that the improvement of the evaluation method of cultural ecosystem service value, the research on the value of cultural ecosystem service under the background of ecosystem service and the clarification of policy significance were the new themes of cultural ecosystem service research. In addition, many articles with citation burst discussed the evaluation method of ecosystem services value (Costanza et al., 2014 ; Groot et al., 2010 ), the evaluation of cultural ecosystem service value (Plieninger et al., 2013 ) and its role in ecosystem service evaluation (Chan et al., 2012 ; Chan, Guerry, et al., 2012 ; Chan, Satterfield, et al., 2012 ; Chan, Satterfield, et al., 2012 ; Daniel et al., 2012 ). The most fresh literature with strong citation burst is the article of D’Amato et al. ( 2017 ) published in the Journal of Cleaner Production, which compared and analyzed sustainable development avenues such as green, circular and bio economy. In addition, it is worthwhile noting the use of R in ecotourism, with the persuasive citation burst continuing from 2012 to the present, as indicated by the orange arrow in Fig.  7 .

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig7_HTML.jpg

Top 30 references with the strongest citation bursts

Landscape view of co-citation analysis

The landscape view of co-citation analysis of Fig.  8 is generated based on the expanded dataset. Using g -index ( k  = 25) selection criteria in the latest edition of CiteSpace, an annual citation network was constructed. The final merged network contained 3294 links, 2122 nodes and 262 co-citation clusters. The three largest linked components cover 1748 connected nodes, representing 82% of the entire network. The modularization degree of the synthetic network is 0.8485, which means that co-citation clustering can clearly define each sub-field of ecotourism. Another weighted mean silhouette value of the clustering validity evaluation is 0.9377, indicating that the clustering degree of the network is also very superior. The harmonic mean value amounts to 0.8909.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig8_HTML.jpg

A landscape view of the co-citation network based on the expanded dataset

In the co-citation network view, the location of clusters and the correlation between clusters can show the intellectual structure in the field of ecotourism, so that readers can obtain an overall understanding of this field. The network falls into 25 co-citation clusters. The tags for each cluster are generated founded on the title, keywords and abstract of the cited article. Color-coded areas represent the time of first appeared co-citation links, with gray indicating earlier and red later. The nodes in the figure with red tree rings are references to citation bursts.

Timeline view

In order to further understand the time horizon and study process of developing evolution on clusters, after the generation of co-citation cluster map, the Y -axis is cluster number and the year of citation publication is X -axis, so as to obtain the timeline view of the co-citation network, shown as Fig.  9 . Clusters are organized vertically from largest to smallest. The color curve represents co-citation link coupled with corresponding color year, with gray representing earlier and red representing newer. Larger nodes and nodes with red tree rings indicate high citation or citation burst. The three most cited references of the year demonstrate below each node, in vertical order from least to most.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 10668_2022_2190_Fig9_HTML.jpg

A timeline visualization of the largest clusters

The timeline view provides a reasonably instinctual and insightful reference to understand the evolutionary path of every subdomain. Figure  9 shows 19 clusters ranging from #0 to #18, with #0 being the largest cluster. As can be seen from the figure, the sustainability and activeness of each cluster are contrasting. For example, the largest cluster has been active since 2006, while the gray and purple clusters are no longer active.

Major clusters

Taking clustering as a unit and analyzing at the level of clustering, specifically selecting large or new type clustering, is the foothold of co-citation analysis, which can help to understand the principal and latest research fields related to ecotourism. Table ​ Table2 2 displays a summary of the foremost 19 clusters, the first nine of which are all over 100 in size. The silhouette score of all clusters is greater than 0.8, indicating that the homogeneity of each cluster is high. The mean year is the average of the publication dates of references in the cluster. By combining the results in Table ​ Table2, 2 , Figs.  8 and ​ and9, 9 , it can be observed that the five largest clusters are #0 cultural ecosystem services, #1 large carnivore, #2 human disturbance, #3 whale shark and #4 ecosystem service. A recent topic is cluster #16 COVID-19 pandemic. #11 Ecological footprint and #14 social media are two relatively youthful fields.

Summary of major clusters

* LLR refers to Log-Likelihood Ratio

The research status of a research field can be demonstrated by its knowledge base and research frontier. The knowledge base consists of a series of scholarly writing cited by the corresponding article, i.e., cited references, while the research frontier is the writing inspired by the knowledge base, i.e., citing articles. Distinct research frontiers may come from the same knowledge base. Consequently, each cluster is analyzed based on cited references and citing articles. The cited references and citing articles of the five largest clusters are shown in Online Appendix A. Fig a) lists the 15 top cited references with the highest Σ (sigma) value in the cluster, where Σ value indicates that the citation is optimal in terms of the comprehensive performance of structural centrality and citation bursts. Fig b) shows the major citing articles of cluster. The citation behavior of these articles determines the grouping of cited literature and thus forms the cluster. The coverage is the proportion of member citations cited by citing articles.

Phase evolution research

Through the above analysis of the core dataset and the expanded dataset of ecotourism, we can see the development and evolution of the research field of ecotourism. The research process of ecotourism has gone through several stages, and each stage has its strategic research issues. Research starts with thinking about the relationship between humans and nature, moves to study it as a whole ecosystem, and then explores sustainable development. Hence, the evolution of ecotourism can be roughly parted into three phases.

Phase I: Human disturbance research stage (2003–2010)

This phase of research concentrates on the influence of human activities such as ecotourism on the environment and animals. Representative keywords of this period include ecotourism, human disturbance, response, coral reef, bird, disturbance, recreation, reserve, park, South Africa and people. Representative articles are those published by West et al. ( 2006 ) and Köndgen et al. ( 2008 ) of human impact on the environment and animals. The representative clustering is #2 human disturbance, which is the third largest one, consisting of 130 cited references from 1998 to 2012 with the average year of 2004. This cluster has citation bursts between 2002 and 2010 and has been inactive since then. As showed in Fig S3 a) and b), the research base and frontier are mainly around the impact of human disturbances such as ecotourism on biology and the environment (McClung et al., 2004 ). And as showed in Fig.  8 and Fig.  9 , clusters closely related to #2 belong to this phase and are also no longer active, such as #5 off-road vehicle, #6 protected area, #10 poverty reduction and #12 sustainable lifestyle.

Phase II: Ecosystem services research stage (2011–2015)

In this stage, the content of ecotourism research is diversified and exploded. The research is not confined to the relationship between humans and nature, but begins to investigate it as an entire ecosystem. In addition, some specific or extended areas began to receive attention. Typical keywords are abundance, resource, Africa, risk, predation, consequence and science. The most illustrative papers in this stage are Fairhead et al. ( 2012 )’s discussion on green grabbing and Milcu et al. ( 2013 )’s review on cultural ecosystem services. Other representative papers in this period focused on the evaluation methods of ecosystem service value and the role of cultural ecosystem service in the evaluation of ecosystem service value. Most of the larger clusters in the survey erupted at this stage, including #0 cultural ecosystem services, #1 large carnivore, #3 whale shark, #4 ecosystem services. Some related clusters also belong to this stage, such as #7 neoliberal conservation, #8 responsible behavior, #9 tourism development, #13 mangrove forest, #15 volunteer tourism, #17 circular economy and #18 telecoupling framework.

Cluster #0 cultural ecosystem services are the largest cluster in ecotourism research field, containing 157 cited references from 2006 to 2019, with the mean year being 2012. It commenced to have the citation burst in 2009, with high cited continuing until 2019. Cultural ecosystem services are an essential component of ecosystem services, including spiritual, entertainment and cultural benefits. Thus, in Fig.  8 , the overlap with #4 ecosystem services can obviously be seen. In Cluster #0, many highly cited references have discussed the trade-offs between natural and cultural ecosystem services in ecosystem services (Nelson et al., 2009 ; Raudsepp-Hearne et al., 2010 ) and the important role of cultural ecosystem services in the evaluation of ecosystem services value (Burkhard et al., 2012 ; Chan, Guerry, et al., 2012 ; Chan, Satterfield, et al., 2012 ; Fisher et al., 2009 ; Groot et al., 2010 ). As non-market value, how to evaluate and quantify cultural ecosystem services is also an important issue (Hernández-Morcillo et al., 2012 ; Milcu et al., 2013 ; Plieninger et al., 2013 ). Besides, the exploration of the relationship among biodiversity, human beings and ecosystem services is also the focus of this cluster research (Bennett et al., 2015 ; Cardinale et al., 2012 ; Díaz et al., 2015 ; Mace et al., 2012 ). The citing articles of #0 indicate the continued exploration of the connotation of cultural ecosystem services and their value evaluation methods (Dickinson & Hobbs, 2017 ). It is noteworthy that some articles have introduced spatial geographic models (Havinga et al., 2020 ; Hirons et al., 2016 ) and social media methods (Calcagni et al., 2019 ) as novel methods to examine cultural ecosystem services. In addition, the link and overlap between #0 cultural ecosystem service and #17 circular economy cannot be overlooked.

Ecosystem services relate to all the benefits that humans receive from ecosystems, including supply services, regulatory services, cultural services and support services. Research on cultural ecosystem services is based on the research of ecosystem services. It can be viewed in Fig.  9 that the research and citation burst in #4 was all slightly earlier than #0. Cluster #4 includes 118 references from 2005 to 2019, with an average year of 2011. In its research and development, how to integrate ecosystem services into the market and the payment scheme to protect the natural environment is a significant research topic (Gómez-Baggethun et al., 2010 ). In Cluster #4, the most influential literature provides an overview of the payment of ecosystem services (PES) from theory to practice by Engel et al. ( 2008 ). Many highly cited references have discussed PES (Kosoy & Corbera, 2010 ; Muradian et al., 2010 ), including the effectiveness of evaluation (Naeem et al., 2015 ), social equity matters (Pascual et al., 2014 ), the suitability and challenge (Muradian et al., 2013 ), and how to contribute to saving nature (Redford & Adams, 2009 ). The cluster also includes studies on impact assessment of protected areas (Oldekop et al., 2016 ), protected areas and poverty (Brockington & Wilkie, 2015 ; Ferraro & Hanauer, 2014 ), public perceptions (Bennett, 2016 ; Bennett & Dearden, 2014 ) and forest ecosystem services (Hansen et al., 2013 ). The foremost citing articles confirm the dominant theme of ecosystem services, especially the in-depth study and discussion of PES (Muniz & Cruz, 2015 ). In addition, #4 is highly correlated with #7 neoliberal protection, and Fairhead et al. ( 2012 ), a representative article of this stage, belongs to this cluster.

As the second largest cluster, Cluster #1 contains 131 references from 2008 to 2019, with the median year of 2014. As Fig S2 a) shows, the highly cited literature has mainly studied the status and protection of large carnivores (Mace, 2014 ; Ripple et al., 2014 ), including the situation of reduction (Craigie et al., 2010 ), downgrade (Estes et al., 2011 ) and even extinction (Dirzo et al., 2014 ; Pimm et al., 2014 ), and the reasons for such results, such as tourist visits (Balmford et al., 2015 ; Geffroy et al., 2015 ) and the increase in population at the edge of the protected areas (Wittemyer et al., 2008 ). The conservation effects of protected areas on wildlife biodiversity (Watson et al., 2014 ) and the implications of tourist preference heterogeneity for conservation and management (Minin et al., 2013 ) have also received attention. It is worth noting that the high citation rate of a paper using R to estimate the linear mixed-effects model (Bates et al., 2015 ) and the use of R in this cluster. The relationship between biodiversity and ecotourism is highlighted by the representative citing articles in research frontier of this cluster (Chung et al., 2018 ).

Cluster #3 refers to marine predator, and as shown in Fig.  8 , which has a strong correlation with #1. A total of 125 references were cited from 2002 to 2018, with an average year of 2011. References with high citation in #3 mainly studied the extinction and protection of marine life such as sharks (Dulvy et al., 2014 ), as well as the economic value and ecological impact of shark ecotourism (Clua et al., 2010 ; Gallagher & Hammerschlag, 2011 ; Gallagher et al., 2015 ). The paper published by Gallagher et al. ( 2015 ) is both the highly cited reference and main citing article, mainly focusing on the impact of shark ecotourism. It is also noteworthy that #6 protected area, #13 mangrove forest and #29 Mediterranean areas are highly correlated with these two clusters (Fig.  8 ).

Moreover, some clusters are not highly correlated with other clusters, but cannot be neglected at this stage of research. Cluster #8 responsible behavior includes 107 citations with the average year 2013, and mainly studied environmentally responsible behaviors in ecotourism (Chiu et al., 2014 ). Cluster #9 tourism development contains 97 cited references with mean year of 2015, focusing on the impact of such factors as residents’ perception on tourism development (Sharpley, 2014 ). Cluster #15 volunteer tourism consists of 52 citations, with an average year of 2011, which mainly considers the role of volunteer tourism in tourism development and sustainable tourism (Wearing & McGehee, 2013 ). Cluster #18 telecoupling framework has 26 cited references with the mean year being 2015, and the application of the new integrated framework of telecoupling 1 in ecotourism can be seen (Liu et al., 2015 ).

At this stage, it can be seen that the research field of ecotourism begins to develop in the direction of diversification, including the value evaluation and related research of ecosystem services and cultural ecosystem services, as well as the exploration of wild animals and plants, marine animals and plants and biodiversity. Neoliberal conservation, tourists’ responsible behavior, tourism development, volunteer tourism and circular economy are all explored. Some new research methods have also brought fresh air to this field, such as the introduction of spatial geographic models and social media methods, the discussion of economic value evaluation methods, the widespread use of R and the exploration of telecoupling framework. Therefore, from this stage, research in the field of ecotourism has entered the second stage of scientific discipline development (Shneider, 2009 ), featured by the use and evolution of research tools that can be used to investigate potential phenomena.

Phase III: Sustainable development research stage (2016 to present)

This stage of research continues to explore a series of topics of the preceding phase and further extends the research field on this basis. The keywords at this stage are politics, marine protected area and valuation. Some other keywords are still very active today, such as experience, challenge, sustainable development, willingness to pay, perspective, strategy, quality and satisfaction. The representative article is about sustainable development published by D'Amato et al. ( 2017 ), as shown in Fig.  8 belonging to #17 circular economy. The emerging clusters in this period are #11 ecological footprint, #14 social media and #16 COVID-19 pandemic. Cluster #11 contains 70 cited references from 2013 to 2020 with the mean year 2017. This clustering study mainly used the ecological footprint as an environmental indicator and socioeconomic indicators such as tourism to investigate the hypothesis of environmental Kuznets curve (Ozturk et al., 2016 ; Ulucak & Bilgili, 2018 ). Cluster #14 includes 52 cited references, with an average year of 2016. It can be seen that the introduction of social media data has added new color to research in the field of ecotourism, such as using social media data to quantify landscape value (Zanten et al., 2016 ) and to understand tourists’ preferences for the experience of protected areas (Hausmann et al., 2018 ), as well as from a spatial perspective using social media geo-tagged photos as indicators for evaluating cultural ecosystem services (Richards & Friess, 2015 ). As the latest and most concerned topic, cluster #16 contains 48 cited references, with mean year of 2018. This cluster mainly cites research on over-tourism (Seraphin et al., 2018 ) and sustainable tourism (Higgins-Desbiolles, 2018 ) and explores the impact of pandemics such as COVID-19 on global tourism (Gössling et al., 2021 ).

These emerging clusters at this phase bring fresh thinking to the research of ecotourism. First of all, the analysis of ecological footprint provides a tool for measuring the degree of sustainability and helps to monitor the effectiveness of sustainable programs (Kharrazi et al., 2014 ). Research and exploration of ecological footprint in ecotourism expresses the idea of sustainable development and puts forward reasonable planning and suggestions by comparing the demand of ecological footprint with the carrying capacity of natural ecosystem. Secondly, the use of social media data brings a new perspective of data acquisition to ecotourism research. Such large-scale data acquisition can make up for the limitations of sample size and data sampling bias faced by survey data users and provide a new way to understand and explore tourist behavior and market (Li et al., 2018 ). Finally, the sudden impact of COVID-19 in 2020 and its long-term sustainability has dealt a huge blow to the tourism industry. COVID-19 has highlighted the great need and value of tourism, while fundamentally changing the way destinations, business and visitors plan, manage and experience tourism (CREST, 2020 ). However, the stagnation of tourism caused by the pandemic is not enough to meet the challenges posed by the environment and the climate crisis. Therefore, how to sustain the development of tourism in this context to meet the challenges of the environment and climate change remains an important issue in the coming period of time. These emerging clusters are pushing the boundaries of ecotourism research and the exploration of sustainable development in terms of research methods, data collection and emerging topics.

Despite the fact that the research topics in this stage are richer and more diversified, the core goal of research is still committed to the sustainable development of ecotourism. The introduction of new technologies and the productive results have led to a much-improved understanding of research issues. All this commemorates the entrance of research into the third stage of the development of scientific disciplines (Shneider, 2009 ). In addition to continuing the current research topics, the future development of the field of ecotourism will continue to focus on the goal of sustainable development and will be more diversified and interdisciplinary.

This paper uses scientometrics to make a comprehensive visual domain analysis of ecotourism. The aim is to take advantage of this method to conduct an in-depth systematic review of research and development in the field of ecotourism. We have enriched the process of systematic reviews of knowledge domains with features from the latest CiteSpace software. Compared with previous studies, this study not only updated the database, but also extended the dataset with citation expansion, so as to more comprehensively identify the rapidly developing research field. The research not only identifies the main clusters and their advance in ecotourism research based on high impact citations and research frontiers formed by citations, but also presents readers with new insights through intuitive visual images. Through this study, readers can swiftly understand the progress of ecotourism, and on the basis of this study, they can use this method to conduct in-depth analysis of the field they are interested in.

Our research shows that ecotourism has developed rapidly in recent years, with the number of published articles increasing year by year, and this trend has become more pronounced after 2018. The research field of ecotourism spans many disciplines and is a comprehensive interdisciplinary subject. Ecotourism also attracts the attention of numerous developed and developing countries and institutions. The USA, China, Australia and South Africa are in a relatively leading position in the research and development of ecotourism. Foam tree map and pie chart of major topics, and the landscape view of keywords provide the hotspot issues of the research field. The development trend of ecotourism is preliminarily understood by detecting the citation bursts of the keywords and published articles. Co-citation analysis generates the main clusters of ecotourism research, and the timeline visualization of these clusters provides a clearer view for understanding the development dynamics of the research field. Building on all the above results, the research and development of ecotourism can be roughly divided into three stages: human disturbance, ecosystem services and sustainable development. Through the study of keywords, representative literature and main clusters in each stage, the development characteristics and context of each stage are clarified. From the current research results, we can catch sight that the application of methods and software in ecotourism research and the development of cross-field. Supported by the Shneider’s four-stage theory of scientific discipline (Shneider, 2009 ), it can be thought that ecotourism is in the third stage. Research tools and methods have become more potent and convenient, and research perspectives have become more diverse.

Based on the overall situation, research hotspots and development tendency of ecotourism research, it can be seen that the sustainable development of ecotourism is the core issue of current ecotourism research and also an important goal for future development. In the context of the current pandemic, the tourism industry is in crisis, but crisis often breeds innovation, and we must take time to reconsider the way forward. As we look forward to the future of tourism, we must adopt the rigor and dedication required to adapt to the pandemic, adhering to the principles of sustainable development while emphasizing economic reliability, environmental suitability and cultural acceptance. Post-COVID, the competitive landscape of travel and tourism will change profoundly, with preventive and effective risk management, adaptation and resilience, and decarbonization laying the foundation for future competitiveness and relevance (CREST, 2020 ).

In addition, as can be seen from the research and development of ecotourism, the exploration of sustainable development increasingly needs to absorb research methods from diverse fields to guide the formulation of policy. First of all, how to evaluate and quantify ecotourism reasonably and scientifically is an essential problem to be solved in the development of ecotourism. Some scholars choose contingent valuation method (CVM) and choice experiment (CE) in environmental economics to evaluate the economic value of ecotourism, especially non-market value. In addition, the introduction of spatial econometrics and the use of geographic information system (GIS) provide spatial scale analysis methods and results presentation for the sustainable development of ecotourism. The use of social media data implies the application of big data technology in the field of ecotourism, where machine learning methods such as artificial neural networks (ANN) and linear discriminant analysis (LDA) are increasingly being applied (Talebi et al., 2021 ). The measurement of ecological footprint and the use of telecoupling framework provide a reliable way to measure sustainable development and the interaction between multiple systems. These approaches all have expanded the methodological boundaries of ecotourism research. It is worth noting that R, as an open source and powerful software, is favored by scholars in the field of ecotourism. This programming language for statistical computation is now widely used in statistical analysis, data mining, data processing and mapping of ecotourism research.

The scientometrics method used in this study is mainly guided by the citation model in the literature retrieval dataset. The range of data retrieval exercises restraint by the source of retrieval and the query method utilized. While current methods can meet the requirements, iterative query optimization can also serve to advance in the quality of the data. To achieve higher data accuracy, the concept tree function in the new version of CiteSpace can also serve to clarify the research content of each clustering (Chen, 2017 ). In addition, the structural variation analysis in the new edition is also an interesting study, which can show the citation footprints of typical high-yielding authors and judge the influence of the author on the variability of network structure through the analysis of the citation footprints (Chen, 2017 ).

Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.

Acknowledgements

This study is funded by Education Department of Heilongjiang Province (1451MSYYB013) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.71874026 and No.71171044).

Authors’ contributions

In this study, LX proposed the research topic, designed the research methodology and framework, and made the data analysis. She was the major contributor in writing the manuscript. CA contributed to the design of the whole paper, including the research topic and methodology, and also participated in the writing and revision of the manuscript. BL and ZC were involved in data collection and analysis. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Availability of data and material

Declarations.

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interest or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Not applicable.

Liu, J., Hull, V., Batistella, M., DeFries, R., Dietz, T., Fu, F.,... Zhu, C. (2013). Framing Sustainability in a Telecoupled World. Ecology and Society , 18 (2), 26. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-05873-180226

Publisher's Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Contributor Information

Lishan Xu, Email: nc.ude.unjdm@0104102 .

Changlin Ao, Email: nc.ude.uaen@nilgnahcoa .

Baoqi Liu, Email: moc.qq@457115825 .

Zhenyu Cai, Email: moc.qq@697833194 .

  • Abad-Segura E, Cortés-García FJ, Belmonte-Ureña LJ. The sustainable approach to corporate social responsibility: A global analysis and future trends. Sustainability. 2019; 11 (19):5382. doi: 10.3390/su11195382. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ahmad F, Draz MU, Su L, Ozturk I, Rauf A. Tourism and environmental pollution: Evidence from the one belt one road (OBOR) provinces of Western China. Sustainability. 2018; 10 (10):3520. doi: 10.3390/su10103520. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ardoin NM, Wheaton M, Bowers AW, Hunt CA, Durham WH. Nature-based tourism's impact on environmental knowledge, attitudes, and behavior: A review and analysis of the literature and potential future research. Journal of Sustainable Tourism. 2015; 23 (6):838–858. doi: 10.1080/09669582.2015.1024258. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Balmford A, Green JMH, Anderson M, Beresford J, Huang C, Naidoo R, Walpole M, Manica A. Walk on the wild side: Estimating the global magnitude of visits to protected areas. PLoS Biology. 2015; 13 (2):e1002074. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002074. [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Bates D, Mächler M, Bolker B, Walker S. Fitting linear mixed-effects models using lme4. Journal of Statistical Software. 2015; 67 (1):132904. doi: 10.18637/jss.v067.i01. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Bennett NJ. Using perceptions as evidence to improve conservation and environmental management. Conservation Biology. 2016; 30 (3):582–592. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12681. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Bennett EM, Cramer W, Begossi A, Cundill G, Díaz S, Egoh BN, Geijzendorffer IR, Krug CB, Lavorel S, Lazos E, Lebel L, Martín-López B, Meyfroidt P, Mooney HA, Nel JL, Pascual U, Payet K, Harguindeguy NP, Peterson GD, Prieur-Richard A-H, Reyers B, Roebeling P, Seppelt R, Solan M, Tschakert P, Teja Tscharntke BL, Turner PH, Verburg EF, Viglizzo PCL, White GW. Linking biodiversity, ecosystem services, and human well-being: Three challenges for designing research for sustainability. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability. 2015; 14 :76–85. doi: 10.1016/j.cosust.2015.03.007. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Bennett NJ, Dearden P. Why local people do not support conservation: Community perceptions of marine protected area livelihood impacts, governance and management in Thailand. Marine Policy. 2014; 44 :107–116. doi: 10.1016/j.marpol.2013.08.017. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Brockington D, Wilkie D. Protected areas and poverty. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 2015; 370 (1681):20140271. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2014.0271. [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Burkhard B, Kroll F, Nedkov S, Müller F. Mapping ecosystem service supply, demand and budgets. Ecological Indicators. 2012; 21 :17–29. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2011.06.019. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Calcagni F, Maia ATA, Connolly JJT, Langemeyer J. Digital co-construction of relational values: Understanding the role of social media for sustainability. Sustainability Science. 2019; 14 :1309–1321. doi: 10.1007/s11625-019-00672-1. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Cardinale BJ, Emmett Duffy J, Gonzalez A, Hooper DU, Perrings C, Venail P, Narwani A, Mace GM, Tilman D, Wardle DA, Kinzig AP, Daily GC, Loreau M, Grace JB, Larigauderie A, Srivastava DS, Naeem S. Biodiversity loss and its impact on humanity. Nature. 2012; 486 :59–67. doi: 10.1038/nature11148. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ceballos-Lascuráin, H. C. (1996). Tourism, ecotourism, and protected areas: The state of nature-based tourism around the world and guidelines for its development. World Congress on National Parks and Protected Areas, 4th, Caracas.
  • Chan KMA, Guerry AD, Balvanera P, Klain Sarah, Satterfield T, Basurto X, Bostrom A, Chuenpagdee R, Gould R, Halpern BS, Hannahs N, Levine J, Norton B, Ruckelshaus M, Russell R, Tam J, Woodside U. Where are cultural and social in ecosystem services? A framework for constructive engagement. BioScience. 2012; 62 (8):744–756. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chan KMA, Satterfield T, Goldstein J. Rethinking ecosystem services to better address and navigate cultural values. Ecological Economics. 2012; 74 :8–18. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2011.11.011. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chen C. Predictive effects of structural variation on citation counts. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 2011; 63 (3):431–449. doi: 10.1002/asi.21694. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chen C. Science mapping: A systematic review of the literature. Journal of Data and Information Science. 2017; 2 (2):1–40. doi: 10.1515/jdis-2017-0006. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chen C, Dubin R, Kim MC. Emerging trends and new developments in regenerative medicine a scientometric update (2000–2014) Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy. 2014; 14 (9):1295–1317. doi: 10.1517/14712598.2014.920813. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chen C, Dubin R, Kim MC. Orphan drugs and rare diseases: A scientometric review (2000–2014) Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy. 2014; 2 (7):709–724. doi: 10.1517/21678707.2014.920251. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chen C, Hu Z, Liu S, Tseng H. Emerging trends in regenerative medicine a scientometric analysis in CiteSpace. Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy. 2012; 12 (5):593–608. doi: 10.1517/14712598.2012.674507. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chen C, Leydesdorff L. Patterns of connections and movements in dual-map overlays: A new method of publication portfolio analysis. Journal of the Association for Information Science. 2014; 65 (2):334–351. doi: 10.1002/asi.22968. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chiu Y-TH, Lee W-I, Chen T-H. Environmentally responsible behavior in ecotourism: Antecedents and implications. Tourism Management. 2014; 40 :321–329. doi: 10.1016/j.tourman.2013.06.013. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Chung MG, Dietz T, Liu J. Global relationships between biodiversity and nature-based tourism in protected areas. Ecosystem Services. 2018; 34 :11–23. doi: 10.1016/j.ecoser.2018.09.004. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Clua E, Buray N, Legendre P, Mourier J, Planes S. Behavioural response of sicklefin lemon sharks Negaprion acutidens to underwater feeding for ecotourism purposes. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 2010; 414 :257–266. doi: 10.3354/meps08746. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Coria J, Calfucura E. Ecotourism and the development of indigenous communities: The good, the bad, and the ugly. Ecological Economics. 2012; 73 :47–55. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2011.10.024. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Costanza R, de Groot R, Sutton P, van der Ploeg S, Anderson SJ, Kubiszewski I, Stephen Farber R, Turner K. Changes in the global value of ecosystem services. Global Environmental Change. 2014; 26 :152–158. doi: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.04.002. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Craigie ID, Baillie JEM, Balmford A, Carbone C, Collen B, Greena RE, Hutton JM. Large mammal population declines in Africa’s protected areas. Biological Conservation. 2010; 143 (9):2221–2228. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2010.06.007. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • CREST. (2019). The Case for Responsible Travel: Trends & statistics 2019 . https://www.responsibletravel.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/213/2021/03/trends-and-statistics-2019.pdf
  • CREST. (2020). The Case for Responsible Travel: Trends & statistics 2020 . https://www.responsibletravel.org/docs/trendsStats2020.pdf
  • D’Amato D, Droste N, Allen B, Kettunen M, Lähtinen K, Korhonen J, Leskinen P, Matthies BD, Toppinen A. Green, circular, bio economy: A comparative analysis of sustainability avenues. Journal of Cleaner Production. 2017; 168 :716–734. doi: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.09.053. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Daniel TC, Muhar A, Arnberger A, Aznar O, Boyd JW, Chan KMA, Costanza R, Elmqvist T, Flint CG, Gobster PH, Gret-Regamey A, Lave R, Muhar S, Penker M, Ribe RG, Schauppenlehner T, Sikor T, Soloviy I, Spierenburg M, Taczanowska K, Tam J, von der Dunk A. Contributions of cultural services to the ecosystem services agenda. PNAS. 2012; 109 (23):8812–8819. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1114773109. [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Díaz S, Demissew S, Carabias J, Joly C, Lonsdale Mark, Ash N, Larigauderie A, Adhikari JR, Arico S, Báldi A, Bartuska A, Baste IA, Bilgin A, Brondizio E, Chan KMA, Figueroa VE, Duraiappah A, Fischer M, Hill R, Koetz T, Leadley P, Lyver P, Mace GM, Martin-Lopez B, Okumura M, Pacheco D, Pascual U, Pérez ES, Reyers B, Roth E, Saito O, Scholes RJ, Sharma N, Tallis H, Thaman R, Watson R, Yahara T, Hamid ZA, Akosim C, Al-Hafedh Y, Allahverdiyev R, Amankwah E, Asah ST, Asfaw Z, Gabor Bartus L, Brooks A, Caillaux J, Dalle G, Darnaedi D, Driver A, Erpul G, Escobar-Eyzaguirre P, Failler P, Fouda AMM, Bojie Fu, Gundimeda H, Hashimoto S, Homer F, Lavorel S, Lichtenstein G, Mala WA, Mandivenyi W, Matczak P, Mbizvo C, Mehrdadi M, Metzger JP, Mikissa JB, Moller H, Mooney HA, Mumby P, Nagendra H, Nesshover C, Oteng-Yeboah AA, Pataki G, Roué M, Rubis J, Schultz M, Smith P, Sumaila R, Takeuchi K, Thomas S, Verma M, Yeo-Chang Y, Zlatanova D. The IPBES conceptual framework-connecting nature and people. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability. 2015; 14 :1–16. doi: 10.1016/j.cosust.2014.11.002. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Dickinson DC, Hobbs RJ. Cultural ecosystem services: Characteristics, challenges and lessons for urban green space research. Ecosystem Services. 2017; 25 :179–194. doi: 10.1016/j.ecoser.2017.04.014. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Dirzo R, Young HS, Galetti M, Ceballos G, Isaac NJB, Collen B. Defaunation in the anthropocene. Science. 2014; 345 (6159):401–406. doi: 10.1126/science.1251817. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Dulvy NK, Fowler SL, Musick JA, Cavanagh RD, Kyne PM, Harrison LR, Carlson JK, Davidson LN, Fordham SV, Francis MP, Pollock CM, Simpfendorfer CA, Burgess GH, Carpenter KE, Compagno LJ, Ebert DA, Gibson C, Heupel MR, Livingstone SR, Sanciangco JC, Stevens JD, Valenti S, White WT. Extinction risk and conservation of the world’s sharks and rays. Life. 2014; 3 :e00590. doi: 10.7554/eLife.00590.001. [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Engel S, Pagiola S, Wunder S. Designing payments for environmental services in theory and practice: An overview of the issues. Ecological Economics. 2008; 65 (4):663–674. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2008.03.011. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Estes JA, Terborgh J, Brashares JS, Power ME, Berger J, Bond WJ, Carpenter SR, Essington TE, Holt RD, Jackson JBC, Marquis RJ, Oksanen L, Oksanen T, Paine RT, Pikitch EK, Ripple WJ, Sandin SA, Scheffer M, Schoener TW, Shurin JB, Sinclair ARE, Soulé ME, Virtanen R, Wardle DA. Trophic downgrading of planet earth. Science. 2011; 333 (6064):301–306. doi: 10.1126/science.1205106. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Fairhead J, Leach M, Scoones I. Green Grabbing: A new appropriation of nature? The Journal of Peasant Studies. 2012; 39 (2):237–261. doi: 10.1080/03066150.2012.671770. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ferraro PJ, Hanauer MM. Quantifying causal mechanisms to determine how protected areas affect poverty through changes in ecosystem services and infrastructure. PNAS. 2014; 111 (11):4332–4337. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1307712111. [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Fisher B, Turner RK, Morling P. Defining and classifying ecosystem services for decision making. Ecological Economics. 2009; 68 (3):643–653. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2008.09.014. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Gallagher AJ, Hammerschlag N. Global shark currency: The distribution, frequency, and economic value of shark ecotourism. Current Issues in Tourism. 2011; 14 (8):797–812. doi: 10.1080/13683500.2011.585227. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Gallagher AJ, Vianna GMS, Papastamatiou YP, Macdonald C, Guttridgeg TL, Hammerschlag N. Biological effects, conservation potential, and research priorities of shark diving tourism. Biological Conservation. 2015; 184 :365–379. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2015.02.007. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Garfield E. Citation indexes for science: A new dimension in documentation through association of ideas. Science. 1955; 122 (3159):108–111. doi: 10.1126/science.122.3159.108. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Geffroy B, Samia DSM, Bessa E, Blumstein DT. How nature-based tourism might increase prey vulnerability to predators. Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 2015; 30 (12):755–765. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2015.09.010. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Gómez-Baggethun E, de Groot R, Lomas PL, Montes C. The history of ecosystem services in economic theory and practice: From early notions to markets and payment schemes. Ecological Economics. 2010; 69 (6):1209–1218. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2009.11.007. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Gössling S, Scott D, Hall CM. Pandemics, tourism and global change: A rapid assessment of COVID-19. Journal of Sustainable Tourism. 2021; 29 (1):1–20. doi: 10.1080/09669582.2020.1758708. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • de Groot RS, Alkemade R, Braat L, Hein L, Willemen L. Challenges in integrating the concept of ecosystem services and values in landscape planning, management and decision making. Ecological Complexity. 2010; 7 (3):260–272. doi: 10.1016/j.ecocom.2009.10.006. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hansen MC, Potapov PV, Moore R, Hancher M, Turubanova SA, Tyukavina A, Thau D, Stehman SV, Goetz SJ, Loveland TR, Kommareddy A, Egorov A, Chini L, Justice CO, Townshend JRG. High-resolution global maps of 21st-century forest cover change. Science. 2013; 342 (6160):850–853. doi: 10.1126/science.1244693. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hausmann A, Toivonen T, Slotow R, Tenkanen H, Moilanen A, Heikinheimo V, Minin ED. Social media data can be used to understand tourists’ preferences for nature-based experiences in protected areas. Conservation Letters. 2018; 11 (1):e12343. doi: 10.1111/conl.12343. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Havinga I, Bogaart PW, Hein L, Tuia D. Defining and spatially modelling cultural ecosystem services using crowdsourced data. Ecosystem Services. 2020; 43 :101091. doi: 10.1016/j.ecoser.2020.101091. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hernández-Morcillo M, Plieninger T, Bieling C. An empirical review of cultural ecosystem service indicators. Ecological Indicators. 2012; 29 :434–444. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.01.013. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Higgins BR. The Global structure of the nature tourism industry: Ecotourists, tour operators, and local businesses. Journal of Travel Research. 1996; 35 (2):11–18. doi: 10.1177/004728759603500203. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Higgins-Desbiolles F. Sustainable tourism: Sustaining tourism or something more? Tourism Management Perspectives. 2018; 25 :157–160. doi: 10.1016/j.tmp.2017.11.017. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hirons M, Comberti C, Dunford R. Valuing cultural ecosystem services. Annual Review of Environment and Resources. 2016; 41 :545–574. doi: 10.1146/annurev-environ-110615-085831. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Kharrazi A, Kraines S, Hoang L, Yarime M. Advancing quantification methods of sustainability: A critical examination emergy, exergy, ecological footprint, and ecological information-based approaches [Review] Ecological Indicators. 2014; 37 :81–89. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.10.003. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Köndgen S, Kühl H, N'Goran PK, Walsh PD, Schenk S, Ernst N, Biek R, Formenty P, Mätz-Rensing K, Schweiger B, Junglen S, Ellerbrok H, Nitsche A, Thomas Briese W, Lipkin I, Pauli G, Boesch C, Leendertz FH. Pandemic human viruses cause decline of endangered great apes. Current Biology. 2008; 18 (4):260–264. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2008.01.012. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Kosoy N, Corbera E. Payments for ecosystem services as commodity fetishism. Ecological Economics. 2010; 69 (6):1228–1236. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2009.11.002. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Krüger O. The role of ecotourism in conservation: Panacea or Pandora’s box? Biodiversity & Conservation. 2005; 14 :579–600. doi: 10.1007/s10531-004-3917-4. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Li J, Xu L, Tang L, Wang S, Li L. Big data in tourism research: A literature review. Tourism Management. 2018; 68 :301–323. doi: 10.1016/j.tourman.2018.03.009. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Liu J, Hull V, Batistella M, DeFries R, Dietz T, Fu F, Zhu C. Framing sustainability in a telecoupled world. Ecology and Society. 2013; 18 (2):26. doi: 10.5751/ES-05873-180226. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Liu J, Hull V, Junyan Luo W, Yang WL, Viña A, Vogt C, Zhenci Xu, Yang H, Zhang J, An Li, Chen X, Li S, Ouyang Z, Weihua X, Zhang H. Multiple telecouplings and their complex interrelationships. Ecology and Society. 2015; 20 (3):44. doi: 10.5751/ES-07868-200344. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Mace GM. Whose conservation? Science. 2014; 345 (6204):1558–1560. doi: 10.1126/science.1254704. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Mace GM, Norris K, Fitter AH. Biodiversity and ecosystem services: A multilayered relationship. Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 2012; 27 (1):19–26. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2011.08.006. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • McClung MR, Seddon PJ, Massaro M, Setiawan AN. Nature-based tourism impacts on yellow-eyed penguins Megadyptes antipodes: Does unregulated visitor access affect fledging weight and juvenile survival? Biological Conservation. 2004; 119 (2):279–285. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2003.11.012. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • MCT. (2021). Statistical Bulletin on Culture and Tourism Development 2020 . Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China. Retrieved from http://www.gov.cn/xinwen/2021-07/05/content_5622568.htm
  • Milcu AI, Hanspach J, Abson D, Fischer J. Cultural ecosystem services: A literature review and prospects for future research. Ecology and Society. 2013; 18 (3):44. doi: 10.5751/ES-05790-180344. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Minin ED, Fraser I, Slotow R, MacMillan DC. Understanding heterogeneous preference of tourists for big game species: Implications for conservation and management. Animal Conservation. 2013; 16 (3):249–258. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-1795.2012.00595.x. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Muniz R, Cruz MJ. Making nature valuable, not profitable: Are payments for ecosystem services suitable for degrowth? Sustainability. 2015; 7 (8):10895–10921. doi: 10.3390/su70810895. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Muradian R, Arsel M, Pellegrini L, Adaman F, Aguilar B, Agarwal B, Corbera E, Ezzine de Blas D, Farley J, Froger G, Garcia-Frapolli E, Gómez-Baggethun E, Gowdy J, Kosoy N, Le Coq JF, Leroy P, May P, Méral P, Mibielli P, Norgaard R, Ozkaynak B, Pascual U, Pengue W, Perez M, Pesche D, Pirard R, Ramos-Martin J, Rival L, Saenz F, Van Hecken G, Vatn A, Vira B, Urama K. Payments for ecosystem services and the fatal attraction of win-win solutions. Conservation Letters. 2013; 6 (4):274–279. doi: 10.1111/j.1755-263X.2012.00309.x. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Muradian R, Corbera E, Pascual U, Kosoy N, May PH. Reconciling theory and practice: An alternative conceptual framework for understanding payments for environmental services. Ecological Economics. 2010; 69 (6):1202–1208. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2009.11.006. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Naeem S, Ingram JC, Varga A, Agardy T, Barten P, Bennett G, Bloomgarden E, Bremer LL, Burkill P, Cattau M, Ching C, Colby M, Cook DC, Costanza R, DeClerck F, Freund C, Gartner T, Goldman-Benner R, Gunderson J, Jarrett D, Kinzig AP, Kiss A, Koontz A, Kumar P, Lasky JR, Masozera M, Meyers D, Milano F, Naughton-Treves L, Nichols E, Olander L, Olmsted P, Perge E, Perrings C, Polasky S, Potent J, Prager C, Quétier F, Redford K, Saterson K, Thoumi G, Vargas MT, Vickerman S, Weisser W, Wilkie D, Wunder S. Get the science right when paying for nature's services. Science. 2015; 347 (6227):1206–1207. doi: 10.1126/science.aaa1403. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Nelson E, Mendoza G, Regetz J, Polasky S, Tallis H, Cameron D, Chan KMA, Daily GC, Goldstein J, Kareiva PM, Lonsdorf E, Naidoo R, Ricketts TH, Shaw M. Modeling multiple ecosystem services, biodiversity conservation, commodity production, and tradeoffs at landscape scales. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 2009; 7 (1):4–11. doi: 10.1890/080023. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Niñerola A, Sánchez-Rebull M-V, Hernández-Lara A-B. Tourism research on sustainability: A bibliometric analysis. Sustainability. 2019; 11 (5):1377. doi: 10.3390/su11051377. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Oladeji SO, Awolala DO, Alabi OI. Evaluation of sustainable ecotourism practices in Oke-Idanre Hills, Ondo-State, Nigeria [Article; Early Access] Environment Development and Sustainability. 2021 doi: 10.1007/s10668-021-01550-6. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Oldekop JA, Holmes G, Harris WE, Evans KL. A global assessment of the social and conservation outcomes of protected areas. Conservation Biology. 2016; 30 (1):133–141. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12568. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Orams MB. Towards a more desirable form of ecotourism. Tourism Management. 1995; 16 (1):3–8. doi: 10.1016/0261-5177(94)00001-Q. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ozturk I, Al-Mulali U, Saboori B. Investigating the environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis: The role of tourism and ecological footprint. Environmental Science and Pollution Research. 2016; 23 :1916–1928. doi: 10.1007/s11356-015-5447-x. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Pascual U, Phelps J, Garmendia E, Brown K, Corbera E, Martin A, Gomez-Baggethun E, Muradian R. Social equity matters in payments for ecosystem services. BioScience. 2014; 64 (11):1027–1036. doi: 10.1093/biosci/biu146. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Pimm SL, Jenkins CN, Abell R, Brooks TM, Gittleman JL, Joppa LN, Raven PH, Roberts CM, Sexton JO. The biodiversity of species and their rates of extinction, distribution, and protection. Science. 2014; 344 (6187):1246752. doi: 10.1126/science.1246752. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Plieninger T, Dijks S, Oteros-Rozas E, Bieling C. Assessing, mapping, and quantifying cultural ecosystem services at community level. Land Use Policy. 2013; 33 :118–129. doi: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2012.12.013. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Raudsepp-Hearne C, Peterson GD, Bennett EM. Ecosystem service bundles for analyzing tradeoffs in diverse landscapes. PNAS. 2010; 107 (11):5242–5247. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0907284107. [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Redford KH, Adams WM. Payment for ecosystem services and the challenge of saving nature. Conservation Biology. 2009; 23 (4):785–787. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01271.x. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Richards DR, Friess DA. A rapid indicator of cultural ecosystem service usage at a fine spatial scale: Content analysis of social media photographs. Ecological Indicators. 2015; 53 :187–195. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2015.01.034. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ripple WJ, Estes JA, Beschta RL, Wilmers CC, Ritchie EG, Hebblewhite M, Berger J, Elmhagen B, Letnic M, Nelson MP, Schmitz OJ, Smith DW, Wallach AD, Wirsing AJ. Status and ecological effects of the world’s largest carnivores. Science. 2014; 343 (6167):1241484. doi: 10.1126/science.1241484. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ross S, Wall G. Ecotourism: Towards congruence between theory and practice. Tourism Management. 1999; 20 (1):123–132. doi: 10.1016/S0261-5177(98)00098-3. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Seraphin H, Sheeran P, Pilato M. Over-tourism and the fall of Venice as a destination. Journal of Destination Marketing & Management. 2018; 9 :374–376. doi: 10.1016/j.jdmm.2018.01.011. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Sharpley R. Host perceptions of tourism: A review of the research. Tourism Management. 2014; 42 :37–49. doi: 10.1016/j.tourman.2013.10.007. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Shasha ZT, Geng Y, Sun H-P, Musakwa W, Sun L. Past, current, and future perspectives on eco-tourism: A bibliometric review between 2001 and 2018. Environmental Science and Pollution Research. 2020; 27 :23514–23528. doi: 10.1007/s11356-020-08584-9. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Shneider AM. Four stages of a scientific discipline; four types of scientist. Trends in Biochemical Sciences. 2009; 34 (5):217–223. doi: 10.1016/j.tibs.2009.02.002. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Sirakaya E, Sasidharan V, Sönmez S. Redefining ecotourism: The need for a supply-side view. Journal of Travel Research. 1999; 38 (2):168–172. doi: 10.1177/004728759903800210. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Snyman S. The role of private sector ecotourism in local socio-economic development in southern Africa. Journal of Ecotourism. 2017; 16 (3):247–268. doi: 10.1080/14724049.2016.1226318. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Talebi M, Majnounian B, Makhdoum M, Abdi E, Omid M. Predicting areas with ecotourism capability using artificial neural networks and linear discriminant analysis (case study: Arasbaran Protected Area, Iran) Environment, Development and Sustainability. 2021; 23 :8272–8287. doi: 10.1007/s10668-020-00964-y. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ulucak R, Bilgili F. A reinvestigation of EKC model by ecological footprint measurement for high, middle and low income countries. Journal of Cleaner Production. 2018; 188 :144–157. doi: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.03.191. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Valdivieso JC, Eagles PFJ, Gil JC. Efficient management capacity evaluation of tourism in protected areas. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management. 2015; 58 (9):1544–1561. doi: 10.1080/09640568.2014.937479. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Watson JEM, Dudley N, Segan DB, Hockings M. The performance and potential of protected areas. Nature. 2014; 515 :67–73. doi: 10.1038/nature13947. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Wearing S, McGehee NG. Volunteer tourism: A review. Tourism Management. 2013; 38 :120–130. doi: 10.1016/j.tourman.2013.03.002. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Weaver DB, Lawton LJ. Twenty years on: The state of contemporary ecotourism research. Tourism Management. 2007; 28 (5):1168–1179. doi: 10.1016/j.tourman.2007.03.004. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • West P, Igoe J, Brockington D. Parks and peoples: The social impact of protected areas. Annual Review of Anthropology. 2006; 35 :251–277. doi: 10.1146/annurev.anthro.35.081705.123308. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Whitelaw PA, King BEM, Tolkach D. Protected areas, conservation and tourism-financing the sustainable dream. Journal of Sustainable Tourism. 2014; 22 (4):584–603. doi: 10.1080/09669582.2013.873445. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Wight P. Ecotourism: Ethics or eco-sell. Journal of Travel Research. 1993; 31 (3):3–9. doi: 10.1177/004728759303100301. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Wittemyer G, Elsen P, Bean WT, Burton ACO, Brashares JS. Accelerated human population growth at protected area edges. Science. 2008; 321 (5885):123–126. doi: 10.1126/science.1158900. [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Xu L, Ao C, Mao B, Cheng Y, Sun B, Wang J, Liu B, Ma J. Which is more important, ecological conservation or recreational service? Evidence from a choice experiment in wetland nature reserve management. Wetlands. 2020; 40 :2381–2396. doi: 10.1007/s13157-020-01348-8. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Zanten BTV, Berkel DBV, Meentemeyer RK, Smith JW, Tieskens KF, Verburg PH. Continental-scale quantification of landscape values using social media data. PNAS. 2016; 113 (46):12974–12979. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1614158113. [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Zhong L, Liu L. Ecotourism development in China: Achievements, problems and strategies. Journal of Resources and Ecology. 2017; 8 (5):441–448. doi: 10.5814/j.issn.1674-764x.2017.05.001. [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]

Articles on Ecotourism

Displaying 1 - 20 of 61 articles.

eco tourism research topics

‘Bluewashing’: how ecotourism can be used against indigenous communities

Michelle Mielly , Grenoble École de Management (GEM)

eco tourism research topics

Tourists are returning to South Africa – but the sector will need to go green to deal with the country’s electricity crisis

Gijsbert Hoogendoorn , University of Johannesburg ; Irma Booyens , University of Strathclyde , and Kristy Langerman , University of Johannesburg

eco tourism research topics

The Northern Territory does not have a crocodile problem – and ‘salties’ do not need culling

Brandon Michael Sideleau , Charles Darwin University

eco tourism research topics

Whale-watching guidelines don’t include boat noise. It’s time they did

Kate Sprogis , The University of Western Australia ; Fredrik Christiansen , Aarhus University , and Patricia Arranz Alonso , Universidad de La Laguna

eco tourism research topics

Not sure how to keep your kids busy and happy these holidays? Here are five tips.

Hannah Olubunmi Ajayi , Obafemi Awolowo University

eco tourism research topics

‘Stealth privatisation’ in iconic national parks threatens public access to nature’s health boost

Ralf Buckley , Griffith University and Alienor Chauvenet , Griffith University

eco tourism research topics

Warming oceans may force New Zealand’s sperm and blue whales to shift to cooler southern waters

Frédérik Saltré , Flinders University ; Karen A Stockin , Massey University , and Katharina J. Peters , University of Canterbury

eco tourism research topics

‘Laid awake and wept’: destruction of nature takes a toll on the human psyche. Here’s one way to cope

Ross Westoby , Griffith University ; Karen E McNamara , The University of Queensland , and Rachel Clissold , The University of Queensland

eco tourism research topics

Protecting biodiversity – and making it accessible – has paid off for Costa Rica

Alejandra Echeverri Ochoa , Stanford University and Jeffrey R. Smith , Princeton University

eco tourism research topics

What COVID-19 travel bans have done to conservation tourism in Africa

Alexander Richard Braczkowski , Griffith University and Duan Biggs , Northern Arizona University

eco tourism research topics

Nigeria could gain by promoting more biodiversity awareness among its citizens

Emmanuel O. Akindele , Obafemi Awolowo University

eco tourism research topics

Tourism desperately wants a return to the ‘old normal’ but that would be a disaster

Susanne Becken , Griffith University

eco tourism research topics

Whale sharks: boat strikes in protected areas could be harming the animals’ development

Daire Carroll , University of Warwick and Jessica Harvey-Carroll , University of St Andrews

eco tourism research topics

Enjoy them while you can? The ecotourism challenge facing Australia’s favourite islands

Freya Higgins-Desbiolles , University of South Australia

eco tourism research topics

South Africa’s land reform policies need to embrace social, economic and ecological sustainability

Penny Mograbi , Rhodes University ; Alta De Vos , Rhodes University ; Charlie Shackleton , Rhodes University ; Hayley Clements , Stellenbosch University ; Joana Bezerra , Rhodes University ; Kaera Coetzer , University of the Witwatersrand , and Kristi Maciejewski , Stellenbosch University

eco tourism research topics

COVID-19 , Africa’s conservation and trophy hunting dilemma

Duan Biggs , Griffith University ; Alexander Richard Braczkowski , Griffith University ; Alta De Vos , Rhodes University , and Hayley Clements , Stellenbosch University

eco tourism research topics

The mushroom cloud’s silver lining: how the Cold War is helping the biggest fish in the sea

Mark Meekan , Australian Institute of Marine Science

eco tourism research topics

Trophy hunting – can it really be justified by ‘conservation benefits’?

Melanie Flynn , University of Huddersfield

eco tourism research topics

Poor Filipino fishermen are making millions protecting whale sharks

Judi Lowe , Southern Cross University

eco tourism research topics

Mexico wants to run a tourist train through its Mayan heartland — should it?

Gabriel Diaz Montemayor , University of Arkansas

Related Topics

  • Biodiversity
  • Climate change
  • Conservation
  • Coral reefs
  • Great Barrier Reef
  • Sustainability
  • Sustainable tourism
  • Wildlife conservation

Top contributors

eco tourism research topics

International Chair in Ecotourism Research, Griffith University

eco tourism research topics

Research Fellow at the Centre for Planetary Health and Resilient Conservation Group, Griffith University

eco tourism research topics

Adjunct Senior Lecturer in Tourism Management/ Adjunct Associate Professor, University of South Australia

eco tourism research topics

Senior Researcher, African Wildlife Economy Institute and Centre for Sustainability Transitions, Stellenbosch University

eco tourism research topics

Associate Professor, Centre for Sustainability Transitions, Stellenbosch University

eco tourism research topics

Professor and Chair, Southwestern Environmental Science and Policy, Northern Arizona University

eco tourism research topics

Professor of Sustainable Tourism, Griffith Institute for Tourism, Griffith University

eco tourism research topics

Senior Lecturer, School of Environment and Science, Griffith University

eco tourism research topics

Associate Professor, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Queensland

eco tourism research topics

Senior Principal Research Scientist - Oceans and Atmosphere, CSIRO

eco tourism research topics

Professor, University of Waterloo

eco tourism research topics

Senior Research Scientist, CSIRO

eco tourism research topics

Professor, James Cook University

eco tourism research topics

Senior Principal Research Scientist, Australian Institute of Marine Science

eco tourism research topics

Research Fellow, Southern Cross University

  • X (Twitter)
  • Unfollow topic Follow topic

89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples

🏆 best ecotourism topic ideas & essay examples, 🥇 most interesting ecotourism topics to write about, 💡 good research topics about ecotourism, ❓ ecotourism questions.

  • Trends in Ecotourism Ecotourism is defined as “responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment and improves the well-being of local people”.
  • Popularity of Eco-Tourism According to What Is Eco-tourism, this term implies “responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment, sustains the well-being of the local people, and involves interpretation and education”. We will write a custom essay specifically for you by our professional experts 808 writers online Learn More
  • Exploring Environmental Issues: Marine Ecotourism For marine ecotourism to succeed, it must thrive in a manner that accommodates the needs of both the current and future generations and safeguards the natural environment.
  • The Eco-Tourism and Ways That Have Shaped Eco-Tourist Experience After the realization of this “staged authenticity,” the modern tourist is keener to search and experience the real tourist products, the real-life lived, the real natives, and their real practices.
  • Ecotourism vs Cultural Voyeurism: Protection of Local Communities and Cultures Moreover, cultural voyeurism can be attributed to the practices of international companies that do not attach much importance to the lives of indigenous people. Nevertheless, it is important to mention that the inflow of tourists […]
  • Ecotourism in Tropical Biome: Preserving New Zealand Description of Proposal: “Preserving New Zealand” is an adventurous and inspiring tour designed to introduce the participants to the unusual flora and fauna of Fiordland the largest National Park of New Zealand.
  • Types of Tourism and Ecotourism in Peru Therefore, travelers gain an understanding of the natural, cultural, and ethnographic features of the terrain; thus, contributing to the preservation of the continuity of ecosystems and creating the economic setting for the development and maintenance […]
  • Eco-Tourism Activities in New Zealand The project entailed adventurous tours organised with a motive of introducing the participants to the variety of flora and fauna found in the Fiordland of New Zealand.
  • Tourism: Eco, Sports, Culture, Space When tourism is mentioned, many people have the notion that one has to go to a foreign country for a couple of weeks to relax and enjoy the scenery.
  • Ecotourism in Mauritius: How to Have an Eco-Friendly Holiday In addition to this, the Mauritius business community has reinvested part of the proceeds from the sector into the Mauritius economy thereby fostering the country’s economy.
  • Ecotourism Industry Organization The environment is the combination of all living and non-living components on the earth and on the universe as a whole.
  • Eco-Tourism and Eco-Cities The main reason cited for the support of sustainable development is the impact it has on the environment and the communities nearby.
  • Fairmont the Palm Hotel Eco-Tourism Adoption The uniqueness of the above analysis contributes to the existing body of knowledge regarding the cost of implementing eco-tourism, plus the environmental impact of the growth of the tourism industry on the environment.
  • Eco and Cultural Tourism: Extraordinary Experience and Untouched Natural Environment Water which is the source of all forms of life must be used sustainably and thus to be considered an eco friendly resort, water pollution should be unheard of within the resort and water recycling […]
  • The Role of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) in Tourism Marketing The connection between tourism and indigenous is that the tourism industry must include traditional ecological knowledge because it will help to enhance their tourism products and increase benefits to the local community. The links will […]
  • Eco Tourism and Hospitality Industry The aim of this research is to provide the theoretical aspects that govern eco tourism with an aim of increasing conservation of the environment as well as increasing the participation of the local communities.
  • Ecotourism and Voluntourism Strategies and Recommendations The stakeholders such as WARF, ecotourists, voluntourists and the local communities are concerned with the environmental conservation and generation of revenue from the preservation activities which involve conservation of the natural habitat and the wild […]
  • Ecotourism Resort at the Amazon: Amazon Eco-Tourist Resort The objectives of the Amazon Resort will include: Maintaining the natural ecology of the Amazon Providing visitors with service worth their fee Mission The mission of the Amazon Eco Resort will be to offer eco […]
  • Economic Tourism in Australia When the number of foreign tourists is high the government can increase the exchange of currency so as to gain from the tourists at lower taxes on some products mostly used by the inhabitants what […]
  • Alleviating Poverty Through Ecotourism: Monarch Butterfly Reserve of Mexico
  • Aspects Regarding the Romanian Certification in Ecotourism Destinations
  • Tourism and China’s Development: Policies, Regional Economic Growth and Ecotourism
  • The Relationships Between Buddhism and Ecotourism
  • Capturing Tourists’ Preferences for the Management of Community-Based Ecotourism
  • Challenges For Romanian Ecotourism Destinations
  • Community-Based Ecotourism: Its Socio-Economic Impacts at Boabeng-Fiema Monkey Sanctuary, Ghana
  • Conservation, Ecotourism, Poverty, and Income Inequality
  • Community-Based Ecotourism: Livelihood Adaptation Strategy for Kampong Speu Province, Cambodia
  • Developing Ecotourism for the Survival of Sea Turtles
  • Community-Based Ecotourism Management: Case of a Cooperative in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, Mexico
  • Economic, Educational, and Conservation Benefits of Sea Turtle-Based Ecotourism
  • Ecotourism and Archaeotourism: Controversy vs Objectivity
  • Economic, Environmental, and Sustainability Indicators of Ecotourism in Mexico
  • Ecotourism and Economic Growth in the Galapagos: An Island Economy-Wide Analysis
  • Effective Environmental Impact Management Through Ecotourism
  • Ecotourism and Economic Incentives: An Empirical Approach
  • The Relationship Between Sustainability and ‘Ecotourism’
  • Ecotourism and Its Impact on the United Arab Emirates
  • Households’ Assets Dynamics and Ecotourism Choices in the Western Highlands of Cameroon
  • Ecotourism and the Development of Indigenous Communities: Good, Bad, and Ugly
  • Implementation of Strategies Based on the Ecotourism Products
  • Ecotourism and the Economy: Case Study of Mara & Amboseli in Kenya
  • Integrated Communications Marketing Plan For Ecotourism
  • Ecotourism and the Modern Development of the Larnaca
  • Koh Chang Ecotourism: SWOT Analysis
  • Ecotourism: Brazil vs. Costa Rica Comparative Analysis
  • Larnaca’s Ecotourism and Its Development in Modern Days
  • Ecotourism Demand and Differential Pricing of National Park Access in Costa Rica
  • Management Control Systems Within Sustainable Ecotourism: A Study of Belitung
  • Ecotourism Experiences Promoting Conservation and Changing Economic Values
  • Responsible Environmental Behavior Intention of Travelers on Ecotourism Sites
  • Ecotourism for Community Development: Stakeholder’s Perspective in Great Himalayan National Park
  • Rural and Ecotourism Development in Scope of Bulgarian Tourism
  • Ecotourism Involves Responsible Traveling Tourism
  • Preferences for Ecotourism Alternatives on the Standing Rock Sioux Indian Reservation
  • Ecotourism, Tourism, and Development in Mexico
  • Case for the Redistribution of Ecotourism Gains in Kenya
  • The Development and Management of Ecotourism
  • The Relationship Between Common Management and Ecotourism Development
  • What Is the Difference Between Alternative Tourism and Ecotourism?
  • Does China’s Ecotourism Reflect the Country’s Economic Growth?
  • Where Is Ecotourism Most Popular?
  • What Are the Challenges for Romanian Ecotourism Destinations?
  • What Is the Socio-Economic Impact of Ecotourism in Ghana?
  • What Are the Economic Indicators of the Sustainability of Ecotourism in Mexico?
  • What Is the Difference Between Tourism and Ecotourism?
  • How Does the Economy of the Galapagos Islands Depend on Ecotourism?
  • What Is the Impact of Ecotourism on the United Arab Emirates?
  • How Does Ecotourism Impact the African Economy and Environment?
  • What Is the Definition and Concept of Ecotourism?
  • How Big Is the Demand for Ecotourism?
  • What Are the Benefits of Ecotourism to the Environment and Society?
  • What Are the Contributions of Tourism to Economic Development?
  • What Are the Trends in the Development of Ecotourism in Mexico?
  • What Are the Environmental Impacts of Ecotourism?
  • What Are the Ecological Consequences of Ecotourism?
  • What Is the Relationship Between Sustainable Development and Ecotourism?
  • Is Ecotourism a Hospitality Trend?
  • How Can Ecotourism Help You Have a Positive Experience?
  • What Is the Role of Ecotourism in the Implementation of Sustainable Tourism Development?
  • What Is the Marketing Plan for the Integration of Ecotourism?
  • Is Organic Farming a Part of Ecotourism?
  • Why Is the Responsible Environmental Behavior of Travelers So Important for Ecotourism?
  • What Are the Main Priorities of Rural Tourism and Ecotourism in Romania?
  • What Are the Role, Goals and Consequences of Ecotourism?
  • How Did Ecotourism Become Popular?
  • What Are the Economic, Educational and Environmental Benefits of Ecotourism?
  • Which Country Is Best Known for Ecotourism?
  • What Is the Concept of Ecotourism in the Context of Nature Conservation?
  • Chicago (A-D)
  • Chicago (N-B)

IvyPanda. (2023, September 26). 89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/ecotourism-essay-topics/

"89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples." IvyPanda , 26 Sept. 2023, ivypanda.com/essays/topic/ecotourism-essay-topics/.

IvyPanda . (2023) '89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples'. 26 September.

IvyPanda . 2023. "89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples." September 26, 2023. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/ecotourism-essay-topics/.

1. IvyPanda . "89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples." September 26, 2023. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/ecotourism-essay-topics/.

Bibliography

IvyPanda . "89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples." September 26, 2023. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/ecotourism-essay-topics/.

  • National Parks Research Topics
  • Animal Welfare Ideas
  • Bicycle Research Topics
  • Environmental Protection Titles
  • Biodiversity Research Topics
  • Ecosystem Essay Topics
  • Botany Essay Titles
  • Climate Change Titles
  • Environment Research Topics
  • Fishing Research Topics
  • Environmental Sustainability Essay Ideas
  • Hunting Questions
  • Expedition Ideas
  • Tourism Management Questions
  • Wildlife Ideas

IMAGES

  1. THE BENEFITS OF ECO-TOURISM FOR CONSERVATION: How Sustainable Tourism

    eco tourism research topics

  2. Ecotourism and Sustainable Tourism: Management, Opportunities and

    eco tourism research topics

  3. Sustainable tourism infographic

    eco tourism research topics

  4. Eco Tourism-Role of travel as an educative medium

    eco tourism research topics

  5. What is Ecotourism? Responsible Travel Guide

    eco tourism research topics

  6. PPT

    eco tourism research topics

VIDEO

  1. The Irony of Ecotourism

  2. Eco_tourism destinations #LeaveNoTrace#EcologicalTourism # ecoadvanture # greentravel#

  3. Research Topics in Ecotourism

  4. Tourism Research from 1945 to 2022

  5. BSTM 4_Tourism Research_Results and Discussions, Conclusion and Recommendation

  6. MHMTours and Travels

COMMENTS

  1. Four decades of sustainable tourism research: Trends and future

    Most of the research that examined meso-level parameters ((43.7%) is categorized into two broad categories: destination tourism and tourism industry). Topics such as destination management, eco-tourism, and cultural tourism are examples of destination tourism (e.g., Albrecht et al., 2021; Farsari et al., 2011; Hsu et al., 2022). Heritage or ...

  2. Ecotourism and sustainable development: a scientometric review of

    Ecotourism, which has appeared in academic literature since the late 1980s, is a special form of nature-based tourism that maintains the well-being of the local community while protecting the environment and provides tourists with a satisfying nature experience and enjoyment (Ceballos-Lascuráin, 1996; Higgins, 1996; Orams, 1995).With years of research and development, ecotourism has risen to ...

  3. Past, current, and future perspectives on eco-tourism: a bibliometric

    The large number of keywords indicates diversified research topics on eco-tourism. In general, eco-tourism is the most used keyword that appears 991 times with the most extensive network. Other mostly used keywords include conservation (444 times), tourism (344 times), management (277 times), protected area (200 times), biodiversity (167 times ...

  4. Tourist's engagement in eco-tourism: A review and research agenda

    After that, we clubbed a similar topic into a theme. We applied the Kappa inter-coder reliability test to assess the consistency of the themes between the two authors. ... Ecotourism research trends from 1993 to 2022 are presented (Fig. 7) through the alluvial diagram. This trend represents the previous research in terms of the three timeframes ...

  5. Journal of Ecotourism

    The Journal of Ecotourism (JOE) is the world's only international journal on the topic of ecotourism and is considered to be the leading source for knowledge in this area. However, JOE also considers papers that investigate nature-based tourism, research on parks and protected areas, and the moral issues tied to the use of animals in tourism. The journal welcomes conceptual, theoretical, and ...

  6. Ecotourism Research Progress: A Bibliometric Analysis During 1990-2016

    The study aims to evaluate research trends of ecotourism, which has attracted wide attention by both researchers and policymakers as an important way to realize sustainable tourism. Bibliometric analysis was carried through the 2,531 records related to ecotourism searching from Science Citation Index (SCI), Social Science Citation Index (SSCI ...

  7. Eco-tourism, climate change, and environmental policies: empirical

    The practical policies recommended by this research are developing the green financing market, establishing virtual tourism, granting green loans to small and medium enterprises, and government ...

  8. PDF Eco-tourism, climate change, and environmental policies ...

    the topics of environment and climate change. Regardless of ... this research are developing the green financing market, estab- ... Eco-tourism, climate change, and environmental policies ...

  9. Research in tourism sustainability: A comprehensive bibliometric

    The most cited topics are sustainability, ecotourism and sustainable tourism. The second largest cluster (#1) has 158 members and a silhouette value of 0.592. ... with a member tally of 142. Research on this topic has been increasing as SIDS is considered vulnerable to over-tourism during peak seasons and low growth and development due to their ...

  10. Bibliometric evaluation of global research on eco-tourism

    Eco-tourism has been widely regarded as an innovative paradigm for the conservation and sustainable development and a new niche within the tourism industry. Studying eco-tourism from a bibliometric perspective can provide insights into the trends and hot issues in eco-tourism research, and eco-tourism practice, management, and academic development provide important theoretical support and ...

  11. (PDF) Ecotourism research: a bibliometric review

    A total of 1387 ecotourism-related research from the Web of Science (WoS) database from 1991 to 2021 were analyzed in some bibliometric analyses using CiteSpace V software. The WoS database was ...

  12. Bibliometric analysis and literature review of ecotourism: Toward

    The inclusion of an article published in 1990 indicates that ecotourism is a fairly mature research topic in management and related study areas. The trend in the number of publications on the topic, as revealed by Fig. 2, suggests that interest in ecotourism research is increasing in management and related study areas. The present study's ...

  13. Ecotourism Research Progress: A Bibliometric Analysis During 1990-2016

    tourism research; (b) the overall development of the research topics, the geographic areas of case study, and the research methods in ecotourism; (c) the characteristics of dynamic changes of ecotourism research at developing stages. This study might visualize features of global ecotourism research that may serve as a potential guide for future ...

  14. PDF Trends and Issues for Ecotourism & Sustainable Tourism

    • While ecotourism and sustainable tourism are recognized as an important, growing tourism segment, primary research to quantify the size and scope of the market in the USA or internationally is lacking… • Work with UNWTO to collect consistent visitor data, at least from primary markets;

  15. Frontiers in Sustainable Tourism

    Animals as dark tourism attractions: experiences, contexts, and ethics. VALERIE SHEPPARD. David Fennell. Jose-Carlos Garcia-Rosell. 3,140 views. 3 articles. Provides evidence-based research for academics and researchers, industry leaders, policymakers, and consumers to achieve sustainable forms of tourism.

  16. Ecotourism and sustainable development: a scientometric review of

    Introduction. Ecotourism, which has appeared in academic literature since the late 1980s, is a special form of nature-based tourism that maintains the well-being of the local community while protecting the environment and provides tourists with a satisfying nature experience and enjoyment (Ceballos-Lascuráin, 1996; Higgins, 1996; Orams, 1995).With years of research and development, ecotourism ...

  17. Ecotourism Models: Identifying Contributions to Conservation and

    This Research Topic is dedicated to the presentation of research on frameworks, models, applications, and practices which highlight conservation and community strategies for ecotourism. We are interested in models that address the complexities of ecotourism implementation and how they are working and/or how they are challenged. Authors should consider principles relative to ecotourism which ...

  18. Sustainability

    Identifying and quantifying ecotourism opportunities are critical processes in sustainable tourism planning, which is challenging, since ecotourism is a Complex Adaptive System (CAS). This study investigated Ecotourism Opportunities Measurements (EOMs) in the literature and mapped the research trends to provide practical implications for research in this area.

  19. (PDF) PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF SUSTAINABLE ECOTOURISM ...

    As a result of the research, the lack of support from the government and local administration, the. low level of infrastructure, as well as the lack of knowledge of the local population on the ...

  20. Frontiers in Sustainable Tourism

    Ecotourism keith bosak. University of Montana. Missoula, United States. Associate Editor. Ecotourism laurent botti. ... Research Topics See all (5) Learn more about Research Topics. Footer. Guidelines. Author guidelines; Editor guidelines; Policies and publication ethics; Fee policy ...

  21. Ecotourism News, Research and Analysis

    Alejandra Echeverri Ochoa, Stanford University and Jeffrey R. Smith, Princeton University. Tourism revenues account for almost 10% of Costa Rica's gross domestic product. New research shows that ...

  22. 89 Ecotourism Essay Topic Ideas & Examples

    According to What Is Eco-tourism, this term implies "responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment, sustains the well-being of the local people, and involves interpretation and education". We will write. a custom essay specifically for you by our professional experts. 809 writers online.

  23. Research Paper Ecotourism, biodiversity conservation and livelihoods

    Again, ecotourism research in developed nations deals with more varied and specialized forms of ecotourism and topics related to consumer perception and ethical business practices. In contrast, developing destinations focus more on general ecotourism themes and aim to examine developmental issues.

  24. 59 questions with answers in ECOTOURISM

    Microbes and their role in abiotic stress tolerance in food crops 10. Novel nutraceuticals from marine resources 11. Lichens as a potential natural source of dyes in the food industry 12. Bio ...

  25. Digital Detox and Nature-based tourism

    This Research Topic is aimed at addressing issues such as counter-mediatization, digital disconnection, and other reverse trends in media use, focusing on nature-based tourism and ecotourism. In particular, it aims to shed light on the tourists' values and needs behind their interest in unplugged travel within the context of eco-tourism ...