Economics of Forest
  Protection and Management

Publications Claimed in Fiscal Year 2000

  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. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. 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.
  7. 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.
  8. 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.
  9. 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.
  10. 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.
  11. 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.
  12. 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.
  13. 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.
  14. 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.
  15. Moulton, R. J. 1999. An update: changes abound in forestry cost-share assistance programs. Tree Farmer 18(5):10-14.
  16. Moulton, R. J. and G. Hernandez. 2000. Tree Planting in the United States--1998. Tree Planters' Notes 49(2):23-36.
  17. 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.
  18. Prestemon, J. P. and D. N. Wear. 2000. Linking harvest choices to timber supply. Forest Science 46(3):377-389.
  19. Prestemon, J. P. and J. Buongiorno. 2000. Determinants of tree quality and lumber value in natural uneven-aged southern pine stands. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 30(2):211-219.
  20. Prestemon, J. P. and J. M. Pye. 2000. Merging areas in Timber Mart South data. Pages 99-105. 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.
  21. Prestemon, J. P. and T. P. Holmes. 2000. Timber price dynamics following a natural catastrophe. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 82:145-160.
  22. Prestemon, J. P., J. M. Pye, K. L. Abt, D. N. Wear, and C. LeDoux. 2000. Market definition for hardwood timber in the Southern Appalachians. Pages 91-98. 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.
  23. Raunikar, R. and J. Buongiorno. 1999. [The role of economics in forest management: from Faustmann to the environmental Kuznets curve]. Revue Forestiere Francaise Numéro Spécial:102-116.
  24. Raunikar, R., J. Buongiorno, J. Prestemon, and K. L. Abt. 2000. Biological and economic productivity of mixed-aged loblolly pine stands in the South. Pages 218-223. 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.
  25. Reaves, D. W., R. A. Kramer, and T. P. Holmes. 1999. Does question format matter? Valuing an endangered species. Environmental and Resource Economics 14:365-383.
  26. Scarpa, R. 1999. Assessing the amenity value of forests, with applications to Wisconsin and Ireland. PhD University of Wisconsin, Madison WI
  27. Scarpa, R., J. Buongiorno, J.-S. Hseu, and K. L. Abt. 2000. Assessing the non-timber value of forests: a revealed-preference, hedonic model. Journal of Forest Economics 6(2):83-107.
  28. Scarpa, R., S. M. Chilton, W. G. Hutchinson, and J. Buongiorno. 2000. Valuing the recreational benefits from the creation of nature reserves in Irish forests. Ecological Economics 33:237-250.
  29. Siry, J. P., F. W. Cubbage, and A. J. Malmquist. 2000. Potential impacts of increased management intensities on planted pine growth and yield and timber supply modeling in the South. Pages 236-242. 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.
  30. Wear, D. N. 2000. Regional assessment and interregional comparisons of forest investment. Pages 160. 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.
  31. Wear, D. N. 2000. Forest land use changes: fragmentation, urbanization and population. Proceedings: Perspectives on Sustainable Forestry for the South. Raleigh, NC: The Southern Center for Sustainable Forests, North Carolina State University.

 

   modified: 24-Oct-2003
   created by: John Pye
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