ABSTRACT
Even though nature plays a vital role in connecting humans with the natural environment and facilitating leisure lifestyles, little information is known about how to preserve and restore the natural resources and environment. This study developed a conceptual framework to predict outdoor recreationists’ environmentally responsible behavioural intention by combining the constructs of nature-related visual images and environmental attitudes. Results revealed that the visual images generate favourable environmental attitudes that, in turn, had a significant effect on environmentally responsible behavioural intention; this further highlights the importance of the visual images (health-related and usefulness-related nature images) and environmental attitudes (ecocentrism and environmental apathy) in leisure and tourism destination contexts. The conceptual framework offered a comprehensive approach to better understand the close relationships between outdoor recreationists and natural areas. This study suggests tourism destination managers consider the nature-related visual images as environmental and recreational concepts in facilitating travellers’ behaviours in an environmentally responsible manner.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Eunkyoung Park
Eunkyoung Park (M.S.) is a Ph.D. candidate in Hospitality Management at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, USA. Her research focuses on decision-making process, destination management, consumer behaviour in tourism, sustainable tourism: nature-based tourism and agritourism, and forecasting and economic impacts: time series and casual econometric analysis.
Hye Jeong Park
Hye Jeong Park (M.F.A.) is a Ph.D. student in Human-Computer Interaction program at Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA. Her research focuses on design researches and methodologies: design thinking and service design, design and evaluation, human-centered design, human computer interaction, user experience, and emotional design.