Author/Authors
Withey، نويسنده , , Patrick and van Kooten، نويسنده , , G. Cornelis، نويسنده ,
DocumentNumber
3541460
Title Of Article
The effect of climate change on optimal wetlands and waterfowl management in Western Canada
شماره ركورد
5628
Latin Abstract
Warmer temperatures and a decrease in precipitation in the 21st century could severely deplete wetlands in the prairie pothole region of western Canada. In this study, we employ linear regression analysis to determine the casual effect of climate change on wetlands in this region, with temperature, precipitation and the standardized precipitation index (SPI) used to predict the effect of potential climate change on wetlands. We then use a waterfowl–wetlands bioeconomic model to solve for socially optimal levels of duck harvests and wetlands retention under current climate conditions and various climate change scenarios. The model maximizes benefits to hunters plus the amenity values of ducks to non hunters and the non-market ecosystem benefits of wetlands. Results indicate that climate change could decrease wetlands by between 7 and 47%, and that the optimal number of wetlands to retain could decrease by as much as 38% from the baseline climate.
From Page
798
NaturalLanguageKeyword
wildlife management , wetland protection , prairie pothole region , climate change , Bioeconomic modeling
JournalTitle
Studia Iranica
To Page
805
To Page
805
Link To Document