ECOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC-IMPACTS OF FOREST POLICIES - INTERACTIONS ACROSS FORESTRY AND AGRICULTURE

Citation
Rj. Alig et al., ECOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC-IMPACTS OF FOREST POLICIES - INTERACTIONS ACROSS FORESTRY AND AGRICULTURE, Ecological economics, 27(1), 1998, pp. 63-78
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Economics,Ecology,"Environmental Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
09218009
Volume
27
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
63 - 78
Database
ISI
SICI code
0921-8009(1998)27:1<63:EAEOFP>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
A linked model of the US forest and agriculture sectors was used to ex amine the economic and ecological impacts of two forest policies: a mi nimum harvest age limitation and a reduced public harvest policy. Simu lated private responses to both policies indicate that landowners coul d undertake a range of adjustments to minimize their welfare impacts, but imposition of constraints on the management of existing timber sto cks have particularly potent effects. Environmental changes associated with the responses include: (I) impacts on biodiversity trends and wi ldlife habitat conditions when economic incentives prompt afforestatio n of cropland in the North and less conversion of hardwood forest type s to softwood plantations in the South; (2) age class distributions in all regions are 'shortened', compressing a larger inventory volume in to fewer, younger age classes; (3) reductions in the area of the earli est forest successional stages, despite the concentration of inventory in the earlier ages, because of rising timber management intensity in some regions; and (4) sequestered carbon in all parts of the forest s ystem may continue to rise even after total product volumes have begun to fall. Interregional economic impacts include higher prices for pri vate forest land and timber products in the southern US, due to a redu ced public harvest policy concentrated in the West. (C) 1998 Published by Elsevier Science B.V.