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Ecological-Economic Modeling for Biodiversity Management: Potential, Pitfalls, and Prospects
Authors:FRANK WÄTZOLD†††  MARTIN DRECHSLER  CLAIRE W ARMSTRONG†  STEFAN BAUMGÄRTNER‡  VOLKER GRIMM  REAS HUTH  CHARLES PERRINGS§‡‡‡  HUGH P POSSINGHAM  JASON F SHOGREN††  ERS SKONHOFT‡‡  JANA VERBOOM-VASILJEV§§  CHRISTIAN WISSEL
Institution:Department of Economics, UFZ–Centre for Environmental Research, Permoser Strasse 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany;Department of Economics, Norwegian College of Fishery Science, University of Tromso, 9037 Tromso, Norway;Interdisciplinary Institute for Environmental Economics, University of Heidelberg, Bergheimer Strasse 20, 69115 Heidelberg, Germany;Environment Department, University of York at Heslington, York YO 10 5DD, United Kingdom;The Ecology Centre, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia;Department of Economics and Finance, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Avenue, Laramie WY 82071, U.S.A.;Department of Economics, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Dragvoll University Campus, 7491 Dragvoll—Trondheim, Norway;Department of Landscape Ecology, ALTERRA Green World Research, Droevendaalsesteg 3, 6708 Wageningen, The Netherlands;Department of Ecological Modelling, UFZ–Centre for Environmental Research, Permoser Strasse 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:Abstract:  Ecologists and economists both use models to help develop strategies for biodiversity management. The practical use of disciplinary models, however, can be limited because ecological models tend not to address the socioeconomic dimension of biodiversity management, whereas economic models tend to neglect the ecological dimension. Given these shortcomings of disciplinary models, there is a necessity to combine ecological and economic knowledge into ecological-economic models. It is insufficient if scientists work separately in their own disciplines and combine their knowledge only when it comes to formulating management recommendations. Such an approach does not capture feedback loops between the ecological and the socioeconomic systems. Furthermore, each discipline poses the management problem in its own way and comes up with its own most appropriate solution. These disciplinary solutions, however, are likely to be so different that a combined solution considering aspects of both disciplines cannot be found. Preconditions for a successful model-based integration of ecology and economics include (1) an in-depth knowledge of the two disciplines, (2) the adequate identification and framing of the problem to be investigated, and (3) a common understanding between economists and ecologists of modeling and scale. To further advance ecological-economic modeling the development of common benchmarks, quality controls, and refereeing standards for ecological-economic models is desirable.
Keywords:biodiversity management  conservation  economics  interdisciplinary research
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