Wildlife reserves, populations and hunting outcome with smart wildlife
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Wildlife reserves, populations and hunting outcome with smart wildlife. / Jensen, Frank; Jacobsen, Jette Bredahl; Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark.
I: Scandinavian Forest Economics, Bind 45, 2014, s. 58.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Konferenceabstrakt i tidsskrift › Forskning
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TY - ABST
T1 - Wildlife reserves, populations and hunting outcome with smart wildlife
AU - Jensen, Frank
AU - Jacobsen, Jette Bredahl
AU - Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - There is a very small natural resource economic literature on natural reserves and hunting that consider potential stress effects of hunting on the game population and its migration in and out of hunting and reserve areas. In this literature private optimal solution with and without stress effects is compared. There is no consideration on the social optimum. In this paper we consider both private and social optimum in the case where two-way migration between the hunting andreserve areas occur. Thus, migration depends on both hunting pressure and relative population densities. In the social optimum we reach ambiguous results when comparing a situation with and without stress effects. A pure stress effect implies that the population level in a wildlife reserve increase and the population level in the hunting area decrease in optimum. However, this change in optimal population levels increase migration from the wildlife reserve to the hunting area in the social optimum. The total effect is, therefore, ambiguous. For the privateoptimum open-access is assumed and exactly the same results arise as in the social optimum when comparing a situation with and without stress effects.
AB - There is a very small natural resource economic literature on natural reserves and hunting that consider potential stress effects of hunting on the game population and its migration in and out of hunting and reserve areas. In this literature private optimal solution with and without stress effects is compared. There is no consideration on the social optimum. In this paper we consider both private and social optimum in the case where two-way migration between the hunting andreserve areas occur. Thus, migration depends on both hunting pressure and relative population densities. In the social optimum we reach ambiguous results when comparing a situation with and without stress effects. A pure stress effect implies that the population level in a wildlife reserve increase and the population level in the hunting area decrease in optimum. However, this change in optimal population levels increase migration from the wildlife reserve to the hunting area in the social optimum. The total effect is, therefore, ambiguous. For the privateoptimum open-access is assumed and exactly the same results arise as in the social optimum when comparing a situation with and without stress effects.
M3 - Conference abstract in journal
VL - 45
SP - 58
JO - Scandinavian Forest Economics
JF - Scandinavian Forest Economics
SN - 0355-032X
Y2 - 21 May 2014 through 24 May 2014
ER -
ID: 132140416