| Literature DB >> 33036351 |
Christoph Randler1, Piotr Tryjanowski2, Jukka Jokimäki3, Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki3, Naomi Staller1.
Abstract
The new corona virus infection SARS-CoV2 which was later renamed COVID-19 is a pandemic affecting public health. The fear and the constraints imposed to control the pandemic may correspondingly influence leisure activities, such as birding, which is the practice of observing birds based on visual and acoustic cues. Birders are people who carry out birding observations around the globe and contribute to the massive data collection in citizen science projects. Contrasting to earlier COVID-19 studies, which have concentrated on clinical, pathological, and virological topics, this study focused on the behavioral changes of birders. A total of 4484 questionnaire survey responses from 97 countries were received. The questionnaire had an open-ended style. About 85% of respondents reported that COVID-19 has changed their birding behavior. The most significant change in birdwatchers' behavior was related to the geographic coverage of birding activities, which became more local. People focused mostly on yard birding. In total, 12% of respondents (n = 542 cases) reported having more time for birding, whereas 8% (n = 356 cases) reported having less time for birding. Social interactions decreased since respondents, especially older people, changed their birding behavior toward birding alone or with their spouse. Women reported more often than men that they changed to birding alone or with their spouse, and women also reported more often about canceled fieldtrips or society meetings. Respondents from higher developed countries reported that they spend currently more time for birding, especially for birding alone or with their spouse, and birding at local hotspots. Our study suggests that long lockdowns with strict regulations may severely impact on leisure activities. In addition, a temporal and spatial shift in birding due to the pandemic may influence data quality in citizen science projects. As nature-based recreation will be directed more toward nearby sites, environmental management resources and actions need to be directed to sites that are located near the users, e.g., in urban and suburban areas. The results can be applied with caution to other nature-based recreational activities.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral changes; birding; birdwatching; citizen science; leisure; recreation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33036351 PMCID: PMC7579058 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17197310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
A general overview of the relationships of hypotheses and coding of responses.
| Hypothesis | Category | Coding; Variables Used |
|---|---|---|
| H1 | Spatial changes in behaviors | Spatial changes of birding were coded when responder indicated that: birding: |
| H2 | Temporal changes in behaviors | Temporal changes of birding were coded when responder indicated that: |
| H3 | Changes in Social behaviors | Social changes in birding behaviors were coded when responder indicated that: |
| H4 | Role of demography factors | Age was coded as years; |
| H5 | Country differences in behaviors | Human Development Index (HDI, values 0–1); |
Coding example: “I stay “local, not traveling” more than five miles. I bird in “remote locations” and only “alone”. I also bird a lot in my “suburban neighborhood”, walking a 1–2 mile loop. I go “early in the morning” before most neighbors are up and about, and those that are do respect physical distancing. A mega rarity was found two days ago in my state and I chose “not to chase” because we are on a stay-at-home order. […]“. This was coded into: (1) Yes, COVID-19 changed behavior, (2) Yes, reason given, (3) Spatial: closer to home, (4) No group birding, (5) circadian effect: going earlier, (6) no twitching. So, six categories could be coded from this answer.
Overview of the changes in birding behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic. Percentage is given in relation to the full sample of N = 4484. Percentages can exceed 100% because participants could select more than one response.
| Outcome/Reason | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|
| Changes Specifically Related to Birdwatching | ||
| Spatial change | 2668 | 59.5% |
| Temporal change | 898 | 20% |
| Changes due to no group birding | 531 | 11.8% |
| Circadian change | 41 | 0.9% |
| Explicitly visiting less rewarding places | 92 | 2.1% |
| No or less twitching | 70 * | 1.6% |
| Changes not specifically related to birdwatching | ||
| No carpooling | 51 | 1.1% |
| Keeping distance | 45 | 1.0% |
| Avoiding (overcrowded) towers/hides | 42 | 0.9% |
| No equipment sharing | 21 | 0.5% |
| Field trips, meetings, cancelled | 363 | 8.1% |
| Holidays, international travel cancelled | 301 | 6.7% |
| Surveys cancelled | 235 | 5.2 |
| Avoiding crowds | 17 | 0.4% |
* one person reported even more twitching activity; a twitcher is considered a birder who responds with frenzied activity to news of rarities in his/her region, and will spend money and travel long distances to see a rarity or new bird [16].
Spatial changes in birding during the COVID-19 pandemic. Percentage is given in relation to the full sample of N = 4484. Percentages can exceed 100% because participants could select more than one response.
| Percentage | ||
|---|---|---|
| More yard birding | 1070 | 23.9 |
| More birding in closer environment and local areas | 1104 | 24.6 |
| Less birding at remote and over-used areas | 229 | 5.1 |
| Birding is more restricted or limited | 265 | 5.9 |
| Total | 2668 | 59.5 |
Age comparison of different activities. A response indicating “No” meant that the respondent did not mention this in the open-ended question. “Yes” means it was explicitly mentioned. For a general non-age-stratified analysis, see Table 1 and Table 2. SD is standard deviation.
| No | Yes | F |
| Eta-Squared | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | SD | Age | SD | ||||
| Did COVID-19 change birding? | 55.88 | 16.26 | 54.96 | 16.09 | 1.86 | 0.173 | 0.000 |
| Field trips cancelled | 54.55 | 16.17 | 61.36 | 14.15 | 60.27 | <0.001 | 0.013 |
| Avoid group birding | 54.43 | 16.17 | 60.07 | 14.83 | 57.84 | <0.001 | 0.013 |
| Holiday cancelled | 54.94 | 16.23 | 57.41 | 14.43 | 6.59 | 0.01 | 0.001 |
| Survey/monitoring cancelled | 55.13 | 16.17 | 54.69 | 15.34 | 0.16 | 0.686 | 0.000 |
Figure 1Percentage of people responding with “Yes” to the question “Did COVID-19 change your birding behavior?” according to country. Country-based N is given in the Supplementary Material File S4.
Figure 2Spatial changes (more yard birding; closer to home) of birding according to country (percentage of people). Country-based N is given in the Supplementary Material File S4.
Figure 3Temporal changes among countries (percentage of people). “More time” refers to people having more time for birding, while “less time” refers to less time spent for birdwatching during the COVID-19 pandemic. Country-based N is given in the Supplementary Material File S4.
Figure 4Percentage of people mentioning the avoidance of group birding (birding only alone or with spouse/family member) according to countries. Country-based N is given in the Supplementary Material File S4.
Relationship between HDI (human development index) and SI (stringency index) per country and percentage of changes reported. Spearman’s rank correlation.
| Reported Changes | HDI |
| Bonferroni Adjusted | SI |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Changes in birding activity | rs | −0.362 | 0.075 | ns | 0.388 | 0.056 |
| Temporal change (more time) | rs | 0.539 ** | 0.005 | ‡ | −0.192 | 0.359 |
| Group avoidance birding | rs | 0.573 ** | 0.003 | ‡ | −0.607 | 0.001 ‡ |
| Surveys cancelled | rs | −0.162 | 0.44 | ns | 0.229 | 0.272 |
| Fieldtrips and club activities cancelled | rs | 0.510 ** | 0.009 | ‡ | −0.547 | 0.005 ‡ |
| Holidays cancelled | rs | 0.604 ** | 0.001 | ‡ | −0.467 | 0.019 |
| Spatial: more yard birding | rs | −0.684 ** | <0.001 | ‡ | 0.457 | 0.022 |
| P | ||||||
| Spatial: closer to home birding | rs | 0.438 * | 0.028 | ns | 0.174 | 0.405 |
| P |
** indicates p < 0.01; * indicates p < 0.05; ‡ indicates significant after Bonferroni correction (p = 0.006). ns = not significant. Bonferroni was applied with 0.05/8 = 0.006.