MANAGING ECOLOGICALLY INTERDEPENDENT SPECIES
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Publication:4458258
DOI10.1111/J.1939-7445.2003.TB00101.XzbMATH Open1053.92040OpenAlexW1991821983MaRDI QIDQ4458258FDOQ4458258
Authors: Erwin H. Bulte, Richard Damania
Publication date: 17 March 2004
Published in: Natural Resource Modeling (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-7445.2003.tb00101.x
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Environmental economics (natural resource models, harvesting, pollution, etc.) (91B76) Ecology (92D40) Application models in control theory (93C95)
Cites Work
Cited In (14)
- On the management of interconnected wildlife populations
- Uncertainty and species recovery program design.
- The impact of invasive species on some ecological services in a harvested predator-prey system
- Habitat conservation, wildlife extraction and agricultural expansion.
- JOINTLY-DETERMINED ECOLOGICAL THRESHOLDS AND ECONOMIC TRADE-OFFS IN WILDLIFE DISEASE MANAGEMENT
- Impacts of predator-prey interaction on managing maximum sustainable yield and resilience
- Alligator conservation and hunting efficiency
- Optimal management of two ecologically interacting deer species -- reality matters, beliefs don't
- The optimal combination of pastoral activities and wildlife conservation in the Serengeti ecosystem
- Interaction between economic and ecological dynamics in an optimal economic growth model
- CONSERVATION OF WILDLIFE. A BIO-ECONOMIC MODEL OF A WILDLIFE RESERVE UNDER THE PRESSURE OF HABITAT DESTRUCTION AND HARVESTING OUTSIDE THE RESERVE
- High prices for rare species can drive large populations extinct: the anthropogenic Allee effect revisited
- Sustainable management of an alpine national park: handling the two-edged effect of tourism
- Rational noncooperative strategic exploitation of species in a predator-prey ecosystem with random disturbances
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