Economics of Forest
  Protection and Management

Publications for 1993 Problem Area 3

Regional Resource Models


  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. Cubbage, Frederick, Thomas Harris, Jr., Robert Abt, Regina Armster, and Gerardo Pacheco. 1994. Timber supply in the South. Timber Processing 19:45-49.
  5. Gottfried, Robert, David Wear, and Robert Lee. 1996. Institutional solutions to market failure on the landscape scale. Ecological Economics 18:133-140.
  6. 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.
  7. 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.
  8. 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.
  9. 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.
  10. 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.
  11. 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.
  12. Moulton, Robert and Thomas W. Birch. 1996. Western forest landowners: a profile. National Woodlands July:14-16.
  13. 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.
  14. Munn, I. A., J. B. Cutshall, and D. G. Hodges. 1998. 1993 pulpwood logging contractor survey. Forest Products Journal 48(7/8):47-53.
  15. 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.
  16. 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.
  17. Murray, Brian C. 1995. Oligopsony, vertical integration, and output substitution: welfare effects in US pulpwood markets. Land Economics 71:193-206.
  18. Parks, Peter J. 1995. Explaining "irrational" land use: risk aversion and marginal agricultural land. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 28:34-47.
  19. 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.
  20. Prestemon, J. P. 1998. Estimating tree grades for Southern Appalachian natural forest stands. Forest Science 44(1):73-86.
  21. 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.
  22. 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.
  23. Pye, J. M. and R. M. Sheffield. 1997. Topographic characteristics of forests on the margin. -100. In: Urban, D. L. (ed.). Proceedings, 12th Annual Symposium, US Regional Association, International Association for Landscape Ecology. Durham, NC: Duke University.
  24. Swallow, Stephen K. and David N. Wear. 1993. Spatial interactions in multiple-use forestry and substitution and wealth effects for the single stand. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 25:103-120.
  25. Turner, Monica G., David N. Wear, and Richard O. Flamm. 1996. Land ownership and land-cover change in the Southern Appalachian Highlands and the Olympic Peninsula. Ecological Applications 6:1150-1172.
  26. Wagner, John E., Frederick W. Cubbage, and Thomas P. Holmes. 1994. Estimated economic impacts of environmental regulations on southern softwood stumpage markets. Southern Journal of Applied Forestry 18:156-162.
  27. Wagner, John E., Steven C. Deller, and Greg Alward. 1992. Estimating economic impacts using industry and household expenditures. Journal of the Community Development Society 23:79-102.
  28. Wear, D. N. 1996. Forest management and timber production in the U.S. South [Document prepared for Canada/United States lumber consultations]. SCFER Working Paper 82. Research Triangle Park, NC: Southeastern Center for Forest Economics Research. pages 1-40.
  29. 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.
  30. Wear, D. N., R. Abt, and R. Mangold. 1998. People, space, time: factors that will govern forest sustainability. Pages 348-361Transactions of the 63rd North American Wildlife and Natural Resources conference. Washington, D.C.: Wildlife Management Institute.
  31. Wear, David N. 1994. Measuring net investment and productivity in timber production. Forest Science 40(1):192-208.
  32. Wear, David N. and Peter J. Parks. 1994. The economics of timber supply: an analytical synthesis of modeling approaches. Natural Resource Modeling 8:199-223.
  33. Wear, David N. and Richard Flamm. 1993. Public and private forest disturbance regimes in the Southern Appalachians. Natural Resource Modeling 7 (4):379-397.
  34. Wear, David N., Monica G. Turner, and Richard Flamm. 1996. Ecosystem management with multiple owners: landscape dynamics in a Southern Appalachian watershed. Ecological Applications 6:1173-1188.
  35. 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.
  36. Yin, Runsheng and David H. Newman. 1997. Long-run timber supply and the economics of timber production. Forest Science 43:113-120.

 

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