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1.
Environ Manage ; 47(3): 506-17, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21331653

ABSTRACT

Economic assessment of damage caused by invasive alien species provides useful information to consider when determining whether management programs should be established, modified, or discontinued. We estimate the baseline economic damage from an invasive alien pathogen, Ceratocystis fagacearum, a fungus that causes oak wilt, which is a significant disease of oaks (Quercus spp.) in the central United States. We focus on Anoka County, Minnesota, a 1,156 km(2) mostly urban county in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul metropolitan region. We develop a landscape-level model of oak wilt spread that accounts for underground and overland pathogen transmission. We predict the economic damage of tree mortality from oak wilt spread in the absence of management during the period 2007-2016. Our metric of economic damage is removal cost, which is one component of the total economic loss from tree mortality. We estimate that Anoka County has 5.92 million oak trees and 885 active oak wilt pockets covering 5.47 km(2) in 2007. The likelihood that landowners remove infected oaks varies by land use and ranges from 86% on developed land to 57% on forest land. Over the next decade, depending on the rates of oak wilt pocket establishment and expansion, 76-266 thousand trees will be infected with discounted removal cost of $18-60 million. Although our predictions of removal costs are substantial, they are lower bounds on the total economic loss from tree mortality because we do not estimate economic losses from reduced services and increased hazards. Our predictions suggest that there are significant economic benefits, in terms of damage reduction, from preventing new pocket establishment or slowing the radial growth of existing pockets.


Subject(s)
Ascomycota/pathogenicity , Introduced Species/economics , Mycoses/epidemiology , Plant Diseases/economics , Quercus/microbiology , Costs and Cost Analysis , Forestry/economics , Introduced Species/statistics & numerical data , Mycoses/economics , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Quercus/growth & development
2.
Environ Manage ; 38(1): 37-47, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16738821

ABSTRACT

Strategic land retirement in agricultural settings has been used as one way to achieve a combination of social objectives, which include ameliorating water quality problems and enhancing existing systems of wildlife habitat. This study uses a simulation model operating on a virtual landscape, along with the compromise programming method, to illustrate the implications of alternative weighting schemes for the long-term performance of the landscape toward various objectives. The analysis suggests that particular spatial patterns may be related to how various objectives are weighted. The analysis also illustrates the inevitable trade-offs among objectives, although it may be tempting to present retirement strategies as "win-win."


Subject(s)
Agriculture , Conflict, Psychological , Conservation of Natural Resources , Environment Design , Models, Theoretical , Agriculture/economics , California , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Decision Making , Ownership
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