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Biodiversity Economics: Principles, Methods and Applications

Biodiversity Economics: Principles, Methods and Applications

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Cambridge University Press, 12/13/2007
EAN 9780521866835, ISBN10: 0521866839

Hardcover, 692 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 4.3 cm
Language: English

Human induced biodiversity loss is greater now than at any time in human history, with extinctions occurring at rates hundreds of times higher than background extinction levels. The field of biodiversity economics analyses the socio-economic causes of and solutions to biodiversity loss by combining the disciplines of economics, ecology and biology. This field has shown a remarkable degree of transformation over the past four decades and now incorporates the analysis of the entire diversity of biological resources within the living world. Biodiversity Economics presents a series of papers that show how bio-economic analysis can be applied to the examination and evaluation of the problem of various forms of biodiversity loss. Containing insightful bio-economic research by some of prominent practitioners in the field, this volume will be an essential research tool to those working on biodiversity issues in the academic, policy and private sectors.

List of figures
List of contributors
Preface
Acknowledgements
Foreword Jeffrey A. McNeely
Introduction Andreas Kontoleon, Unai Pascual and Timothy Swanson
1. Do we really care about biodiversity? David W. Pearce
Part I. Causes of Biodiversity Loss
A. Land Conversion
2. The economics of land conversion, open access and biodiversity loss Edward B. Barbier
3. Estimating spatial interactions in deforestation decisions Juan Robalino, Alexander Pfaff and Arturo Sanchez-Azofeifa
4. Resource exploitation, biodiversity and ecological events Yacov Tsur and Amos Zemel
B. Invasives
5. Pests pathogens and poverty
biological invasions and agricultural dependence Charles Perrings
6. Prevention versus control in Invasive Species Management David Finnoff, Jason F. Shogren, Brian Leung and David Lodge
C. International Trade
7. Trade and renewable resources in a second-best world
an overview Erwin Bulte and Ed Barbier
8. International trade and its impact on biological diversity Rafat Alam and Nguyen V Quyen
Part II. The Value of Biodiversity
A. Concepts
9. Designing the legacy library of genetic resources
approaches, methods, and results Tim Swanson and Timo Goeschl
10. Why the measurement of species diversity requires prior value judgments Stefan Baumgärtner
B. Techniques
11. Combining TCM and CVM of endangered species conservation program
estimation of the marginal value of vultures (Gyps fulvus) in the presence of species-visitors interaction Nir Becker, Yael Choresh, Moshe Inbar and Ofer Bahat
12. Valuing ecological and anthropocentric concepts of biodiversity
a choice experiments application Michael Christie and Nick Hanley, John Warren, Tony Hyde, Kevin Murphy and Robert Wright
13. Spatially explicit choice experiments
a case of multiple-use management of forest recreation sites Paula Horne, Peter Boxall and Wiktor Adamowicz
Part III. Policies for Biodiversity Conservation
A. Contracts
14. Auctioning biodiversity conservation contracts Gary Stoneham, Vivek Chaudhri, Loris Strappazzon and Arthur Ha
15. An evolutionary institutional approach to the economics of bioprospection Tom Dedeurwaerdere, Vijesh Krishna and Unai Pascual
16. An ecological economic programming approach to modelling landscape level biodiversity conservation Ernst-August Nuppenau and Marc Helmer
B. Implementation
17. The effectiveness of centralized and decentralized institutions in managing biodiversity
lessons from economic experiments Jana Vyrastekova and Daan van Soest
18. Conserving species in a working landscape
land use with biological and economic objectives Steve Polasky, Erik Nelson, Eric Lonsdorf, Paul Fackler and Anthony Starfield
19. Balancing recreation and wildlife conservation of charismatic species Doris Behrens and Birgit Friedl
20. Modelling the re-colonisation of native species Anders Skonhoft
Part IV. Managing Agro-Biodiversity
Causes, Values and Policies
21. On the role of crop biodiversity in the management of environmental risk Salvatore Di Falco and Jean-Paul Chavas
22. Assessing the private value of agro-biodiversity in Hungarian home gardens using the data enrichment method Ekin Birol, Andreas Kontoleon and Melinda Smale
23. Agricultural development and the diversity of crop and livestock genetic resources
a review of the economics literature Melinda Smale and Adam Drucker
Index.

Review of the hardback: Advance praise: 'For the curious, it is an exceptional introduction, covering both the intensive and extensive margin of biodiversity economics. For the cognoscenti, it is a store of original value contributed by outstanding scholars in the field.' Gardner Brown, Professor Emeritus, University of Washington

Review of the hardback: 'For many years the BioEcon program has provided a forum for cutting-edge economic analysis of the important and difficult challenge of biodiversity conservation. This book brings together many of the most important contributions to have emerged from that program, providing an excellent overview of the state-of-the-art in the field.' Stefano Pagiola, Senior Environmental Economist, The World Bank

Review of the hardback: 'Biodiversity loss is one of the great challenges of our time, alongside and closely linked to both climate change and global poverty. This volume offers penetrating analysis and practical approaches to assess the values, stem the loss and begin construction of a biodiversity-friendly economy.' Joshua Bishop, IUCN - The World Conservation Union