Economics of Forest
  Protection and Management

Publications Claimed in Fiscal Year 1998

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Caulfield, J. P. 1998. Timberland in institutional portfolios and the question of persistence. Forest Products Journal 48:23-28.
  4. 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.
  5. Caulfield, J. P. 1998. Asset allocation considerations for timberland investing. Real Estate Review 27(4):46-51.
  6. 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.
  7. Flemming, G. C. M. 1997. Assessing the domestic demand for ecotourism in Jamaica. MS North Carolina A&T State University. 80 pages.
  8. 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.
  9. 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.
  10. Laarman, J. G. and Hans Gregersen. 1996. Pricing policy in nature-based tourism. Journal of Tourism Management 17(4):247-254.
  11. 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.
  12. 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.
  13. 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.
  14. 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.
  15. Mercer, D. E. and R. P. Miller. 1998. Socioeconomic research in agroforestry: progress, prospects, priorities. Agroforestry Systems 38:177-193.
  16. 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.
  17. 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.
  18. 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.
  19. Munn, I. A., J. B. Cutshall, and D. G. Hodges. 1998. 1993 pulpwood logging contractor survey. Forest Products Journal 48(7/8):47-53.
  20. 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.
  21. Murray, B. C. and D. N. Wear. 1998. Federal timber restrictions and interregional arbitrage in U.S. lumber. Land Economics 74(1):76-91.
  22. Newman, David H. 1996. The privatization of forestry research. Journal of Forest Economics 2:5-6.
  23. 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.
  24. Pattanayak, S. and E. Mercer. 1997. Valuing soil conservation benefits of agroforestry. Pages 1714- In: <[23] Series Title>
  25. 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
  26. 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.
  27. Prestemon, J. P. 1997. The effects of NAFTA expansion on U.S. forest products exports. Journal of Forestry 95(7):26-32.
  28. Prestemon, J. P. 1998. Estimating tree grades for Southern Appalachian natural forest stands. Forest Science 44(1):73-86.
  29. 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.
  30. Prestemon, J. P. and J. Buongiorno. 1997. Comparative advantage in U.S. interstate forest products trade. Journal of Forest Economics 3(3):207-228.
  31. Prestemon, J. P. and T. P. Holmes. 1998. Effects of Hurricane Hugo on South Carolina timber prices. Pages 93-100. In: Kluender, R. A., Corrigan, M. M., and Smith, N. B. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1997 Southern Forest Economics Workshop. Monticello, AR: The School of Forest Resources, University of Arkansas.
  32. Schaberg, R. H., T. P. Holmes, and R. C. Abt. 1998. A comparison of stakeholder preferences for market and nonmarket goods and services from two forests in Western North Carolina. Pages 48-53. In: Kluender, R. A., Corrigan, M. M., and Smith, N. B. (ed.). Proceedings of the 1997 Southern Forest Economics Workers Workshop. Monticello, AR: The School of Forest Resources, University of Arkansas.
  33. Steelman, T. A. and W. Ascher. 1997. Public involvement methods in natural resource policy making: advantages, disadvantages and trade-offs. Policy Sciences 30:71-90.
  34. Swallow, S. K., P.Talukdar, and D.N.Wear. 1998. Spatial and temporal specialization in forest ecosystem management under sole ownership. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 79:311-326.
  35. Wear, D. N. 1998. Economics and global climate change. Pages 855-863The productivity and sustainability of southern forest ecosystems in a changing environment New York, NY: Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
  36. Wear, D. N., M.G.Turner, and R.J.Naiman. 1998. Land cover along an urban-rural gradient: implications for water quality. Ecological Applications 8:619-630.
  37. Yarnell, S. L. 1998. The Southern Appalachians: a history of the landscape. General Technical Report SRS-18. Asheville, NC: USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station. pages 1-52.
  38. Yin, R. 1998. Industry characteristics and investment decisions: An alternative approach to pulp and paper production. TAPPI Journal 81(1):69-74.
  39. Yin, Runsheng and David H. Newman. 1995. Optimal timber rotations with evolving prices and costs revisited. Forest Science 41:477-490.
  40. Yin, Runsheng and David H. Newman. 1995. A note on the tree-cutting problem in a stochastic environment. Journal of Forest Economics 1:181-190.
  41. Yin, Runsheng and David H. Newman. 1996. The effect of catastrophic risk on forest investment decisions. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 31:186-197.
  42. Yin, Runsheng and David H. Newman. 1997. When to cut a stand of trees?. Natural Resource Modeling 10(3):251-261.
  43. Zinkhan, C., D. E. Mercer, and B. H. Stansell. 1998. Assessing the market and non-market benefits of Southern agroforestry systems. Pages 45-47. 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.
  44. Zinkhan, F. C., H. R. Jenkins, and J. P. Caulfield. 1998. The impact of securitization and contracting on cash flow patterns of timberland investments. Pages 133-136. 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.
  45. Zinkhan, F. C., T. P. Holmes, and D. E. Mercer. 1997. Conjoint analysis: a preference-based approach for the accounting of multiple benefits in Southern forest management. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 21(4):180-186.

 

   modified: 24-Jul-2002
   created by: John Pye
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