All Stories

  1. Corn yield response to phosphorus fertilizer in Michigan: a metamodeling approach for phosphorus management policies
  2. Testing the robustness of a structural model for discerning use and non-use values of ecosystem services
  3. Comparing water quality valuation across probability and non‐probability samples
  4. Getting off the ladder: Disentangling water quality indices to enhance the valuation of divergent ecosystem services
  5. Measuring beachgoer preferences for avoiding harmful algal blooms and bacterial warnings
  6. Estimating visitor preferences for recreation sites in wildfire prone areas
  7. Distributional Effects of Entry Fees and Taxation for Financing Public Beaches
  8. How Does Congestion Affect the Evaluation of Recreational Gate Fees? An Application to Gulf Coast Beaches
  9. Showing pesticides’ true colors: The effects of a farmer-to-farmer training program on pesticide knowledge
  10. Linking Agricultural Nutrient Pollution to the Value of Freshwater Ecosystem Services
  11. Pesticides: What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You
  12. Valuing Goods Allocated via Dynamic Lottery
  13. Best Practices for Implementing Recreation Demand Models
  14. Timber or carbon? Evaluating forest conservation strategies through a discrete choice experiment
  15. How Will Climate Change Affect the Provision and Value of Water from Public Lands in Southern California Through the 21st Century?
  16. Hidden cost of conservation: A demonstration using losses from human-wildlife conflicts under a payments for ecosystem services program
  17. Economic damages from a worst-case oil spill in the Straits of Mackinac
  18. Valuing Provision Scenarios of Coastal Ecosystem Services: The Case of Boat Ramp Closures Due to Harmful Algae Blooms in Florida
  19. Fixed Costs and Recreation Value
  20. Smallholder participation and procedural compliance with sustainable cocoa certification programs
  21. Households’ preferences for attributes of Conditional Cash Transfer programmes: A choice experiment in Ghana
  22. Estimating the value of lost recreation days from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
  23. Lakefront Property Owners' Willingness to Accept Easements for Conservation of Water Quality and Habitat
  24. Feedback of telecoupling: the case of a payments for ecosystem services program
  25. Accounting for ecosystem services in compensating for the costs of effective conservation in protected areas
  26. Quantifying changes in water use and groundwater availability in a megacity using novel integrated systems modeling
  27. Ecosystem services in the Great Lakes
  28. Solving the Phosphorus Pollution Puzzle: Synthesis and Directions for Future Research
  29. Too Burdensome to Bid: Transaction Costs and Pay‐for‐Performance Conservation
  30. Demand for fishery regulations: Effects of angler heterogeneity and catch improvements on preferences for gear and harvest restrictions
  31. Valuing Lake Erie Beaches Using Value and Function Transfers
  32. Landowner willingness to supply marginal land for bioenergy production
  33. Urban water sustainability: framework and application
  34. Social Capital and Social Norms Shape Human–Nature Interactions
  35. Dynamics of Economic Transformation
  36. Energy Transition from Fuelwood to Electricity
  37. Agricultural landowners’ willingness to participate in a filter strip program for watershed protection
  38. Evolution of tourism in a flagship protected area of China
  39. Sociocultural and institutional contexts of social cash transfer programs: Lessons from stakeholders attitudes and experiences in Ghana
  40. Harvesting benefits from habitat restoration: Influence of landscape position on economic benefits to pheasant hunters
  41. Landscape Prediction and Mapping of Game Fish Biomass, an Ecosystem Service of Michigan Rivers
  42. Economic value of river and stream fishing
  43. Valuing Recreational Fishing in the Great Lakes
  44. Influence of energy alternatives and carbon emissions on an institution's green reputation
  45. Estimating the demand for drop-off recycling sites: A random utility travel cost approach
  46. Economic benefits of publicly accessible land for ruffed grouse hunters
  47. Farmers’ Willingness to Participate in Payment-for-Environmental-Services Programmes
  48. Local Markets for Payments for Environmental Services: Can Small Rural Communities Self-Finance Watershed Protection?
  49. Agent-based modeling of the effects of social norms on enrollment in payments for ecosystem services
  50. Stakeholder preferences for best management practices for non-point source pollution and stormwater control
  51. Exploring the middle ground between environmental protection and economic growth
  52. The economic value of publicly accessible deer hunting land
  53. The Effect of Invitation Design on Web Survey Response Rates
  54. Valuing energy policy attributes for environmental management: Choice experiment evidence from a research institution
  55. Farmer demand for financial record‐keeping system attributes
  56. Using Cost-Effective Targeting to Enhance the Efficiency of Conservation Investments in Payments for Ecosystem Services
  57. The economics of invasive species control and management: The complex road ahead
  58. Time and Money Invested in Off-Season Deer Hunting Activities
  59. Understanding Adoption of Livestock Health Management Practices: The Case of Bovine Leukosis Virus
  60. Factors influencing the rate of recycling: An analysis of Minnesota counties
  61. The effects of behavior and attitudes on drop-off recycling activities
  62. Factors affecting land reconversion plans following a payment for ecosystem service program
  63. Linking social norms to efficient conservation investment in payments for ecosystem services
  64. Relating tradable credits for biodiversity to sustainability criteria in a dynamic landscape
  65. Payment for Environmental Services: Estimating Demand Within a Tropical Watershed
  66. Split-Sample Tests of "No Opinion" Responses in an Attribute-Based Choice Model
  67. Payment for environmental services and other institutions for protecting drinking water in eastern Costa Rica
  68. What wetland bankers think about mitigation banking
  69. Wetland mitigation banking: The bankers' perspective
  70. Ecosystem services and agriculture: Cultivating agricultural ecosystems for diverse benefits
  71. Valuing deer hunting ecosystem services from farm landscapes
  72. Socioeconomic Consequences of Mercury Use and Pollution
  73. Ecosystem Services from Agriculture: Looking Beyond the Usual Suspects
  74. Environmental Constraints on Hydropower: An Ex Post Benefit-Cost Analysis of Dam Relicensing in Michigan
  75. Comparing Urban and Rural Perceptions of and Familiarity With the Management of Forest Ecosystems
  76. Local spatial modeling of white-tailed deer distribution
  77. Landscape Equivalency Analysis: Methodology for Estimating Spatially Explicit Biodiversity Credits
  78. Economic Incentives for Controlling Trade-Related Biological Invasions in the Great Lakes
  79. Tradeable risk permits to prevent future introductions of invasive alien species into the Great Lakes
  80. Color Photographs and Mail Survey Response Rates
  81. Untying a Lancastrian bundle: valuing ecosystems and ecosystem services for wetland mitigation
  82. Recommendations for Assessing Sea Lamprey Damages: Toward Optimizing the Control Program in the Great Lakes
  83. Using an Economic Model of Recreational Fishing to Evaluate the Benefits of Sea Lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) Control on the St. Marys River
  84. Biological Pollution Prevention Strategies under Ignorance:The Case of Invasive Species
  85. The Economic Equivalency of Drained and Restored Wetlands in Michigan
  86. Modeling the choice to switch from fuelwood to electricity
  87. The Effect of Modeling Substitute Activities on Recreational Benefit Estimates
  88. An Empirical Assessment of Multinomial Probit and Logit Models for Recreation Demand
  89. Using partial site aggregation to reduce bias in random utility travel cost models
  90. Valuing the Effects of Water Quality on Recreational Resources: Discussion
  91. Predicting the Effects of Market Reform in Zimbabwe: A Stated Preference Approach
  92. Estimating Consumer Response to Food Market Reform Using Stated Preference Data: Evidence from Eastern and Southern Africa