Ecotourism Benefits through River Conservation

duluth 2 - hansi

 

While previously ignored, these communities have changed their outlook on rivers, understanding the benefits of a healthy ecosystem, and how recreation in river corridors can improve and sustain local economies. Communities have learned how to promote their natural amenities, and as a result have created “destinations,” resulting in evolving recreation and tourism opportunities.

 

 

Read Ecotourism Benefits Through River Conservation

To illustrate the benefits communities have discovered by protecting and restoring local rivers, American Rivers developed Ecotourism Benefits Through River Conservation, a series of case studies highlighting gateway communities and how they have benefited from local river and land conservation. These towns frequently find visitors entering the communities to access parks and other recreation areas — staying in campgrounds and hotels, eating meals in town, purchasing supplies, and exploring the area’s natural and cultural resources.

Each gateway community we present is unique, experiencing their own set of opportunities and challenges. These gateway communities have discovered local treasures — often hidden right before their eyes, and have embraced the evolution from an extraction-based economy to one that celebrates and sustains it’s livelihood through a recreation/tourism based existence.

Gateway Community Case Studies:

The following collection of case studies illustrates examples of communities developing and promoting and ecotourism ethic across the country:

· Blackfoot River Valley, Montana — Blackfoot River

· Conway, South Carolina — Waccamaw River

· Duluth, Minnesota — St. Louis River

· Eagle, Colorado — Eagle and Upper Colorado Rivers

· Jackson County, Oregon — Rogue River

· Rockingham, North Carolina — Hitchcock Creek

Photo Credit: St. Louis River, Duluth, MN; Hansi Johnson