Economics of Forest
  Protection and Management

1993-2002 Publications

  1. Abt, K. L., J. L. Greene, and R. C. Abt. 1999. Chapter 6 - Timber Resources [in Ozark-Ouachita Highlands Assessment Report 4 - Social and Economic Conditions]. General Technical Report SRS-34. Asheville, NC: USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station. pages 167-209.
  2. Abt, R. C., F. W. Cubbage, and G. Pacheco. 2000. Southern forest resource assessment using the Subregional Timber Supply (SRTS) model. Forest Products Journal 50(4):25-33.
  3. Abt, R. C., F. W. Cubbage, K. J. Lee, and I. A. Munn. 1998. Timber Supply: Mississippi and the South. Tree Talk (Jackson, MS) Winter:15-20.
  4. Abt, Robert C., Fred W. Cubbage, and Gerardo Pacheco. 1994. Hardwood availability: who will meet the demand?. Forest Farmer 53(2):13.
  5. Abt, Robert C., Jamie Brunet, Brian C. Murray, and Don G. Roberts. 1994. Productivity growth and price trends in the North American sawmilling industries: an inter-regional comparison. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 24:139-148.
  6. Ahn, S., J. E. de Steiguer, R. B. Palmquist, and T. P. Holmes. 2000. Economic analysis of the potential impact of climate change on recreational trout fishing in the Southern Appalachian Mountains: an application of a nested multinomial logit model. Climate Change 45:493-509.
  7. Aldy, J. E., R. A. Kramer, and T. P. Holmes. 1999. Environmental equity and the conservation of unique ecosystems: an analysis of the distribution of benefits for protecting Southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests. Society and Natural Resources 12:93-106.
  8. Alston, A. 1998. Effective community development: involving local residents in planning ecotourism in selected mountain communities of Jamaica. MS North Carolina A&T State University. 93 pages.
  9. Arano, K. G., T. L. Cushing, and I. A. Munn. 2001. Non-industrial private forest landowners' management expenditures in Mississippi, 1995-1997. Pages 80-84. In: Pelkki, M. H. (ed.). Proceedings of the 2000 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Monticello, Arkansas: School of Forest Resources, University of Arkansas.
  10. Aruna, P. B. and D. E. Mercer. 1999. The timber economy of the Mid-Atlantic Region: some preliminary results from the Mid-Atlantic Integrated Assessment. Pages 172-179. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southern Research Station.
  11. Aruna, P. B., Frederick Cubbage, Karen J. Lee, and Clair Redmond. 1997. Regional economic contributions of the forest-based industries in the South. Forest Products Journal 47:35-45.
  12. bin Mohd, R. and J. Laarman. 1994. The struggle for influence us nongovernmental organizations and tropical forests. Journal of Forestry 92(6):32-36.
  13. Bingham, M., D. MacNair, and J. Prestemon. 1999. Structural change and co-integration in southern timber prices. Pages 118. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southern Research Station.
  14. Birch, Thomas W. and Robert J. Moulton. 1997. Northern forest landowners: a profile. National Woodlands January.
  15. Boltz, F. and D. R. Carter. 2000. Financial returns under stand growth and timber price uncertainties for reduced-impact and conventional logging operations in the eastern Amazon. Pages 3-8. In: Munn, I. A., Bullard, S. H., Grado, S. C., and Grebner, D. L. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1999 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Starkville, MS: Mississippi State University, Department of Forestry.
  16. Boltz, F., T. P. Holmes, and D. R. Carter. 1999. The economics of reduced impact logging in the American tropics: a review of recent initiatives. Pages 145-151. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southern Research Station.
  17. Boyle, K. J. and M. F. Teisl. 1999. Public preferences for timber harvesting on private forest land purchased for public ownership in Maine. Miscellaneous Report 414. Orono, ME: Maine Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station, University of Maine. pages 1-18.
  18. Boyle, Kevin J., Thomas P. Holmes, Mario F. Teisl, and Brian Roe. 2001. A comparison of conjoint analysis response formats. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 83(2):441-454.
  19. Burkhard, D. R. and D. H. Newman. 1996. Legal boundaries and fragmentation of Georgia's (USA) nature reserves. Natural Areas Journal 16(1):24-35.
  20. Busby, R. L., K. L. Abt, and C. Redmond. 1999. Chapter 4 - Economic Profile [in Ozark-Ouachita Highlands Assessment Report 4 - Social and Economic Conditions]. General Technical Report SRS-34. Asheville, NC: USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station. pages 99-130.
  21. Butry, D. and S. Pattanayak. 2000. Welfare implications of tropical forest conservation: the case of Ruteng Park. Pages 115-122. In: Munn, I. A., Bullard, S. H., Grado, S. C., and Grebner, D. L. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1999 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Starkville, MS: Mississippi State University, Department of Forestry.
  22. Butry, D. T., D. E. Mercer, J. P. Prestemon, J. M. Pye, and T. P. Holmes. 2001. What is the price of catastrophic wildfire?. Journal of Forestry 99(11):9-17.
  23. Carter, D. R. 1999. Structural change in Southern softwood stumpage markets. Pages 112-117. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Williamsburg, VA: Southern Research Station, USDA Forest Service.
  24. Carter, D. R. and D. H. Newman. 1998. The impact of reserve prices in sealed bid federal timber sale auctions. Forest Science 44(4):485-495.
  25. Carter, Douglas R. and Frederick W. Cubbage. 1994. Technical efficiency and industry evolution in southern U.S. pulpwood harvesting. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 24:217-224.
  26. Caulfield, J. P. 1998. The evolution of institutional timberland investment strategy. Pages 123-127. In: Kluender, R. A., Smith, N. B., and Corrigan, M. M. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1997 Southern Forest Economics Workers Meeting. Monticello, AR: University of Arkansas.
  27. Caulfield, J. P. 1998. Timberland in institutional portfolios and the question of persistence. Forest Products Journal 48:23-28.
  28. Caulfield, J. P. 1998. Timberland return drivers and investing styles for an asset that has come of age. Real Estate Finance 14(4):65-78.
  29. Caulfield, J. P. 1998. Asset allocation considerations for timberland investing. Real Estate Review 27(4):46-51.
  30. Caulfield, J. P. and F. C. Zinkhan. 1998. Timberland allocation in institutional portfolios: short- and long-term persistence. Pages 128-132. In: Kluender, R. A., Smith, N. B., and Corrigan, M. M. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1997 Southern Forest Economics Workers Meeting. Monticello, AR: University of Arkansas.
  31. Clark, J. S., S. R. Carpenter, M. Barber, S. Collins, A. Dobson, J. A. Foley, D. M. Lodge, M. Pascual, R. Pielke, Jr., W. Pizer, C. Pringle, W. V. Reid, K. A. Rose, O. Sala, W. H. Schlesinger, D. H. Wall, and D. Wear. 2001. Ecological forecasts: an emerging imperative. Science 293(5530):657-660.
  32. Conway, M. C., G. S. Amacher, and J. Sullivan. 2000. The effects of shifting preferences and forest fragmentation on nonindustrial forest landowner behavior: evidence from the South. Pages 144. In: Munn, I. A., Bullard, S. H., Grado, S. C., and Grebner, D. L. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1999 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Starkville, MS: Mississippi State University.
  33. Cubbage, F. W., J. M. Pye, T. P. Holmes, and J. E. Wagner. 2000. An economic evaluation of fusiform rust protection research. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 24(2):77-85.
  34. Cubbage, F. W., J. Siry, R. Abt, D. Wear, and S. Moffat. 1999. Forest productivity and timber supply modeling in the South. Pages 285-290. In: Ek, A. R. and ZumBahlen, B. (ed.). Conference Proceedings: Improving Forest Productivity for Timber. Duluth, MN:
  35. Cubbage, F. W., J. Siry, S. Moffat, D. Wear, and R. Abt. 1998. Southern Forest Resource Assessment and linkages to the National RPA. Pages 344-349Proceedings of the Society of American Foresters 1998 National Convention. Traverse City, MI: Society of American Foresters.
  36. Cubbage, Fred and John Godbee. 1994. Forestry best management practices are in your future. Forest Farmer 53:15-17, 24.
  37. Cubbage, Fred. 1993. Federal environmental laws and you. Forest Farmer 52(3):15-18.
  38. Cubbage, Frederick and Douglas Carter. 1994. Productivity and cost changes in southern pulpwood harvesting, 1979. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 18:83-90.
  39. Cubbage, Frederick W. and Curtis H. Flather. 1993. Forested wetland area and distribution. Journal of Forestry 91:35-40.
  40. Cubbage, Frederick W., Thomas G. Harris, Jr., David N. Wear, Robert C. Abt, and Gerardo Pacheco. 1995. Timber supply in the South: where is all the wood?. Journal of Forestry 93:16-20.
  41. Cubbage, Frederick, Thomas Harris, Jr., Robert Abt, Regina Armster, and Gerardo Pacheco. 1994. Timber supply in the South. Timber Processing 19:45-49.
  42. Donoghue, E. M. 1999. Community support organizations and community-based forest management in the Philippines. PhD NC State University. 209 pages.
  43. Ellefson, P. V., R. J. Moulton, and M. A. Kilgore. 2001. Programs and organizations affecting the use, management, and protection of forests: an assessment of agencies located across the organizational landscape of state governments. University of Minnesota. 119 pages.
  44. Ellefson, Paul V., Antony S. Chang, and Robert J. Moulton. 1997. State forest practice regulatory programs: an approach to implementing ecosystem management on private forest lands in the United States. Environmental Management 21:421-432.
  45. Esseks, J. D. and R. J. Moulton. 2000. Evaluating the Forest Stewardship Program Through a National Survey of Participating Forest Land Owners. De Kalb, IL: Center for Governmental Studies, Social Science Research Institute, Northern Illinois University. pages 1-111.
  46. Esseks, J. D. and R. J. Moulton. 2000. Evaluating the Forest Stewardship Program Through a National Survey of Participating Forest Land Owners. In: Munn, I. A., Bullard, S. H., Grado, S. C., and Grebner, D. L. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1999 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Starkville, MS: Mississippi State University, Department of Forestry.
  47. Fina, M., G. S. Amacher, and J. Sullivan. 2001. Uncertainty, debt, and forest harvesting: Faustmann revisited. Forest Science 47(2):188-196.
  48. Flemming, G. C. M. 1997. Assessing the domestic demand for ecotourism in Jamaica. MS North Carolina A&T State University. 80 pages.
  49. Gaddis, D. A., B. D. New, F. W. Cubbage, R. C. Abt, and R. J. Moulton. 1995. Accomplishments and economic evaluations of the Forestry Incentives Program: A review. SCFER Working Paper 78. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southeastern Center for Forest Economics Research. pages 1-52.
  50. Gottfried, Robert, David Wear, and Robert Lee. 1996. Institutional solutions to market failure on the landscape scale. Ecological Economics 18:133-140.
  51. Gumpertz, M. L., C.-T. Wu, and J. M. Pye. 2000. Logistic regression for southern pine beetle outbreaks with spatial and temporal autocorrelation. Forest Science 46(1):95-107.
  52. Haefele, M., R. A. Kramer, and T. P. Holmes. 1992. Estimating the total value of forest quality in high-elevation spruce-fir forests. Pages 91-96. In: Bowker, J. M. and Reed, P. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the Conference: The Economic Value of Wilderness, General Technical Report. Asheville, NC: Southeastern Forest Experiment Station.
  53. Haight, Robert G. and Thomas P. Holmes. 1991. Stochastic price models and optimal tree cutting: results for loblolly pine. Natural Resource Modeling 5:423-443.
  54. Hardie, I., P. Parks, P. Gottleib, and D. Wear. 2000. Responsiveness of rural and urban land uses to land rent determinants in the U.S. South. Land Economics 76(4):659-673.
  55. Hardie, Ian W. and Peter J. Parks. 1996. Program enrollment and acreage response to reforestation cost-sharing programs. Land Economics 72:248-260.
  56. Hawks, Laurie J., Frederick W. Cubbage, Harry L. Haney, Jr., Robert M. Shaffer, and David H. Newman. 1993. Forest water quality protection. Journal of Forestry 91:48-54.
  57. Holmes, T, L. Pendleton, and R. Mendelsohn. 1997. Economic value of ecosystem attributes in the Southern Appalachian highlands. General Technical Report SRS-17. Asheville, NC: USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station. pages 187-190.
  58. Holmes, T. P. 1991. Price and welfare effects of catastrophic forest damage from Southern Pine Beetle epidemics. Forest Science 37(2):500-516.
  59. Holmes, T. P. 1992. Economic welfare impacts of air pollution damage to forests in the southern United States. General Technical Report SE-75. Asheville, NC: Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, USDA Forest Service. pages 19-26.
  60. Holmes, T. P. and R. A. Kramer. 1995. Economic values, ethics, and ecosystem health. SCFER Working Paper 80. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southeastern Center for Forest Economics Research. pages 1-25.
  61. Holmes, T. P., G. M. Blate, J. C. Zweede, R. Pereira, Jr., P. Barreto, F. Boltz, and R. Bauch. 2000. Financial costs and benefits of reduced impact logging relative to conventional logging in the Eastern Amazon. Washington, D.C.: Tropical Forest Foundation. 48.
  62. Holmes, T., C. Zinkhan, K. Alger, and E. Mercer. 1996. Conjoint analysis of nature tourism values in Bahia, Brazil. FPEI Working Paper 57. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southeastern Center for Forest Economics Research. pages 1-19.
  63. Holmes, T., K. Alger, C. Zinkhan, and E. Mercer. 1998. The effect of response time on conjoint analysis estimates of rainforest protection values. Journal of Forest Economics 4(1):7-28.
  64. Holmes, Thomas P. and Randall A. Kramer. 1995. An independent sample test of yea-saying and starting point bias in dichotomous-choice contingent valuation. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 29:121-132.
  65. Holmes, Thomas P. and Randall A. Kramer. 1996. Contingent valuation of ecosystem health. Ecosystem Health 2:56-60.
  66. Holmes, Thomas P., Frederick Boltz, and Douglas F. Carter. 2001. Financial indicators of reduced impact logging performance in Brazil: case study comparisons. Pages 152-162International Conference on the Application of Reduced Impact Logging to Advance Sustainable Forest Management. Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia: The Asia-Pacific Forestry Commission.
  67. Holmes, Thomas P., Geoffrey M. Blate, Johan C. Zweede, Rodrigo Pereira, Jr., Paulo Barreto, Frederick Boltz, and Roberto Bauch. In press. Financial and ecological indicators of reduced impact logging performance in the eastern Amazon. Forest Ecology and Management
  68. Johnson, Rebecca L., Ralph J. Alig, Eric Moore, and Robert J. Moulton. 1997. NIPF landowners, view of regulation. Journal of Forestry 95:23-28.
  69. Klemperer, W. David, James F. Cathcart, and Thomas Haring. 1994. Risk and the discount rate in forestry. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 24:390-397.
  70. Kramer, R. A. and D. E. Mercer. 1997. Valuing a global environmental good: US residents' willingness to pay to protect tropical rain forests. Land Economics 73:196-210.
  71. Laarman, J. and H. Gregersen. 1994. Making nature-based tourism contribute to sustainable development: a policy framework. Policy Brief 5. Madison, WI: Environmental and Natural Resources Policy and Training Project, University of Wisconsin. pages 1-6.
  72. Laarman, J. G. and Hans Gregersen. 1996. Pricing policy in nature-based tourism. Journal of Tourism Management 17(4):247-254.
  73. Laarman, J. G., Eden Jacosalem Stewart, and Patrick C. Dugan. 1995. The economics of extraction in Philippine forests: when timber turns to gold. Mountain Research and Development 15:153-164.
  74. Lee, K. J. 1997. Hedonic estimation of nonindustrial private forest landowner amenity values. PhD North Carolina State University. 80 pages.
  75. Lee, Karen J., Fred Kaiser, and Ralph J. Alig. 1992. Substitution of public for private funding in planting southern pine. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 16:204-208.
  76. Lee, Karen. 1997. Economics in ecosystem management: do we know what the public wants?. General Technical Report SRS-17. Asheville, NC: Southern Research Station. pages 191-194.
  77. Lee, Robert G., Richard Flamm, Robin R. Gottfried, Robert J. Naiman, Monica Turner, and David N. Wear. 1994. A holistic approach to landscape management. Journal of Forestry 92:51.
  78. Leffler, K. B., R. R. Rucker, and I. A. Munn. 2000. Transaction costs and the collection of information: presale measurement on private timber sales. Journal of Law, Economics and Organization 16(1):164-186.
  79. Leffler, Keith, Ian Munn, and Randal Rucker. 1993. An economic analysis of cruising activities on private timber sales. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 75:1299.
  80. Lin, C. R., J. Buongiorno, J. Prestemon, and K. Skog. 1998. Growth model for uneven-aged loblolly pine stands: simulations and management implications. Research Paper FPL-RP-569. Madison, WI: USDA Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory. pages 1-13.
  81. Luppold, W. G., J. P. Prestemon, and A. Schuler. 2002. Changing markets for hardwood roundwood. Pages 96-100. In: Zhang, D. (ed.). Proceedings of the 2001 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Auburn, AL: School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences, Auburn University.
  82. Luppold, W. G., J. P. Prestemon, and J. E. Baumgras. 1998. An examination of the relationships between hardwood lumber and stumpage prices in Ohio. Wood and Fiber Science 30(3):281-292.
  83. McDill, M. E. and D. Tucker. 1998. Projecting the industrial and nonindustrial timber resources of Louisiana with STRIPS. Pages 114-119. In: Kluender, R. A., Corrigan, M. M., and Smith, N. B. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1997 Southern Forest Economics Workers Meeting. Monticello, AR: The Arkansas Forest Resources Center, University of Arkansas.
  84. Mercer, D. E. 1996. Book review of Costs, benefits, and farmer adoption of agroforestry: project experience in Central America end the Caribbean. Agroforestry Systems 34:224-227.
  85. Mercer, D. E. and R. P. Miller. 1998. Socioeconomic research in agroforestry: progress, prospects, priorities. Agroforestry Systems 38:177-193.
  86. Mercer, D. E., J. M. Pye, J. P. Prestemon, D. T. Butry, and T. P. Holmes. 2000. Economic effects of catastrophic wildfires.
  87. Mercer, E. and P. B. Aruna. 2000. Assessing the impacts of forests on human welfare: preliminary results from the Mid-Atlantic Integrated Assessment. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 63:43-63.
  88. Mercer, E., A. Thompson, and G. Flemming. 1999. Eco-tourism in the Blue and John Crow Mountains National Park of Jamaica, West Indies: Chapter 4. Economic demand for ecotourism development. The Research Technical Bulletin Series T-141. Greensboro, NC: North Carolina A&T State University School of Agriculture. pages 53-69+Appendix.
  89. Mercer, E., R. Kramer, and N. Sharma. 1995. Rain forest tourism: estimating the benefits of tourism development in a new national park in Madagascar. Journal of Forest Economics 1:239-269.
  90. Moffat, S. O., F. W. Cubbage, T. P. Holmes, and E. O'Sullivan. 2001. Characterizing the sustainable forestry issue network in the United States. Forest Policy and Economics 2(3-4):307-318.
  91. Moffat, S., F. W. Cubbage, A. J. Cascio, and R. M. Sheffield. 1999. The future of forest management on NIPF lands in the South: results of an expert opinion survey. Pages 17-24. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southern Research Station.
  92. Moulton, R. J. 1998. Tree Planting in the United States--1997. Tree Planters' Notes 49(1):5-15.
  93. Moulton, R. J. 1999. Why plant trees?. Pages 3-10. In: Vories, K. C. and Throgmorton, D. (ed.). Proceedings of enhancement of reforestation at surface coal mines: technical interactive forum. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University, Coal Research Center.
  94. Moulton, R. J. 1999. An update: changes abound in forestry cost-share assistance programs. Tree Farmer 18(5):10-14.
  95. Moulton, R. J. 1999. Forestry in U.S. climate change action plans: from the Arch to Kyoto. Pages 204-207. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southern Research Station.
  96. Moulton, R. J. and G. Hernandez. 2000. Tree Planting in the United States--1998. Tree Planters' Notes 49(2):23-36.
  97. Moulton, R. J. and J. D. Esseks. 2001. Highlights of the national evaluation of the Forest Stewardship Planning Program. Pages (in press). In: Pelkki, M. (ed.). Proceedings of the 2000 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Lexington, KY: University of Kentucky.
  98. Moulton, R. J. and J. F. Kelly. 1997. The physical risks of reforestation as a strategy to offset global climate change. Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology 27(Special):S245-S257.
  99. Moulton, Robert and Thomas W. Birch. 1996. Western forest landowners: a profile. National Woodlands July:14-16.
  100. Munn, I. A. and D. Cleaves. 1999. An analysis of losses to the southern commercial timberland base. Pages 198-202. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southern Research Station.
  101. Munn, I. A. and D. L. Evans. 1998. The Southern commercial timberland base: changes and projections. Pages 81-88. Proceedings of the International Conference: Geospatial Information in Agriculture and Forestry. Ann Arbor, MI: ERIM International, Inc.
  102. Munn, I. A. and R. R. Rucker. 1998. Predicting forestry consultant participation based on physical characteristics of timber sales. Journal of Forest Economics 4(2):105-125.
  103. Munn, I. A., J. B. Cutshall, and D. G. Hodges. 1998. 1993 pulpwood logging contractor survey. Forest Products Journal 48(7/8):47-53.
  104. Munn, Ian A. and E. Carlyle Franklin. 1995. Do consultants really generate higher timber prices?. Winter: 26-29 The Consultant.
  105. Munn, Ian A. and Randal R. Rucker. 1994. The value of information services in a market for factors of production with multiple attributes: the role of consultants in private timber sales. Forest Science 40:474-496.
  106. Munn, Ian A. and Randal R. Rucker. 1995. An economic analysis of the differences between bid prices on Forest Service and private timber sales. Forest Science 41:823-840.
  107. Munn, Ian A. and Raymond B. Palmquist. 1997. Estimating hedonic price equations for a timber stumpage market using stochastic frontier estimation procedures. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 27:1276-1280.
  108. Murray, B. C. and D. N. Wear. 1998. Federal timber restrictions and interregional arbitrage in U.S. lumber. Land Economics 74(1):76-91.
  109. Murray, B. C., R. C. Abt, D. N. Wear, P. J. Parks, and I. W. Hardie. 2001. Land allocation in the Southeastern U.S. in response to climate change impacts on forestry and agriculture. World Resource Review 13(2):239-251.
  110. Murray, Brian C. 1995. Measuring oligopsony power with shadow prices: US markets for pulpwood and sawlogs. The Review of Economics and Statistics 77:486-498.
  111. Murray, Brian C. 1995. Oligopsony, vertical integration, and output substitution: welfare effects in US pulpwood markets. Land Economics 71:193-206.
  112. Nagubadi, V., I. A. Munn, and A. ahai. 2001. Integration Of hardwood stumpage markets in the Southcentral United States. Journal of Forest Economics 7(1):69-98.
  113. New, B. D., F. W. Cubbage, and R. J. Moulton. 1997. The Stewardship Incentive Program, 1992-1994: An Accomplishment and Program Review. SCFER Working Paper 83. Research Triangle Park, NC: The Southeastern Center for Forest Economics Research. pages 1-37.
  114. Newman, David H. 1996. The privatization of forestry research. Journal of Forest Economics 2:5-6.
  115. Newman, David H. and David N. Wear. 1993. Production economics of private forestry: a comparison of industrial and nonindustrial forest owners. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 75:674-684.
  116. Orlande, Teresa, Jan Laarman, and Jason Mortimer. 1996. Palmito sustainability and economics in Brazil's Atlantic coastal forest. Forest Ecology and Management 80:257-265.
  117. Panton, C. A., G. Gayle, and A. Thompson. 1999. Eco-tourism in the Blue and John Crow Mountains National Park of Jamaica, West Indies: Biophysical Assessment. The Research Technical Bulletin Series T-141. Greensboro, NC: North Carolina A&T State University School of Agriculture. pages 8-31.
  118. Parks, P. J., D. O. Hall, K. Bengt, O. R. Masera, R. J. Moulton, A. J. Plantinga, J. N. Swisher, and J. K. Winjum. 1997. An economic approach to planting trees for carbon storage. Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology 27(Special):S9-S21.
  119. Parks, P. J., I. W. Hardie, C. A. Tedder, and D. N. Wear. 2000. Using resource economics to anticipate forest land use change in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic region. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 63:175-185.
  120. Parks, Peter J. 1995. Explaining "irrational" land use: risk aversion and marginal agricultural land. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 28:34-47.
  121. Parks, Peter J. and Brian C. Murray. 1994. Land attributes and land allocation: nonindustrial forest use in the Pacific Northwest. Forest Science 40:558-575.
  122. Pattanayak, S. and D. E. Mercer. 1996. Valuing soil conservation benefits of agroforestry practices. FPEI Working Paper 59. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southeastern Center for Forest Economics Research. pages 1-21.
  123. Pattanayak, S. and E. Mercer. 1997. Valuing soil conservation benefits of agroforestry. Pages 1714- In: <[23] Series Title>
  124. Pattanayak, S. K. 1997. Pricing ecological services provided by protected watersheds: micro-economic applications in agrarian communities of Indonesia and the Philippines. PhD Department of the Environment, Duke University
  125. Pattanayak, S. K. and D. E. Mercer. 2002. Indexing soil conservation: farmer perceptions of agroforestry benefits. Journal of Sustainable Forestry 15(2):63-85.
  126. Pattanayak, S. K., D. E. Mercer, E. O. Sills, and K. Cassingham. 2002. Adopting agroforestry. Pages 184-189. In: Zhang, D. (ed.). Proceedings of the 2001 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Auburn, AL: School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences, Auburn University.
  127. Pattanayak, Subhrendu and D. Evan Mercer. 1998. Valuing soil conservation benefits of agroforestry: contour hedgerows in the Eastern Visayas, Philippines. Agricultural Economics 18(1998):31-46.
  128. Pearse, Peter H. and Thomas P. Holmes. 1993. Accounting for nonmarket benefits in southern forest management. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 17:84-89.
  129. Pendleton, L. H. and J. S. Shonkwiler. 2001. Valuing bundled attributes: a latent characteristics approach. Land Economics 77(1):118-129.
  130. Pendleton, L., B. Sohngen, R. Mendelsohn, and T. Holmes. 1998. Measuring environmental quality in the Southern Appalachian Mountains. Forest Science 44(4):603-609.
  131. Prestemon, J. P. 1997. The effects of NAFTA expansion on U.S. forest products exports. Journal of Forestry 95(7):26-32.
  132. Prestemon, J. P. 1998. Estimating tree grades for Southern Appalachian natural forest stands. Forest Science 44(1):73-86.
  133. Prestemon, J. P. 1998. The effects of NAFTA and an FTAA on U.S. exports of hardwood forest products. In: Meyers, D. A. (ed.). Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth Annual Hardwood Symposium. Memphis, TN: National Hardwood Lumber Association.
  134. Prestemon, J. P. 2000. Public open access and private timber harvests: theory and application to the effects of trade liberalization in Mexico. Environmental and Resource Economics 17:311-334.
  135. Prestemon, J. P. and D. N. Wear. 1999. Inventory effects on aggregate timber supply. Pages 26-32. In: Abt, K. L. and Abt, R. C. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1998 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southern Research Station.
  136. Prestemon, J. P. and D. N. Wear. 2000. Linking harvest choices to timber supply. Forest Science 46(3):377-389.
  137. Prestemon, J. P. and J. Buongiorno. 1996. The impacts of NAFTA on U.S. and Canadian forest product exports to Mexico. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 26:794-809.
  138. Prestemon, J. P. and J. Buongiorno. 1997. Comparative advantage in U.S. interstate forest products trade. Journal of Forest Economics 3(3):207-228.
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