The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden

In Sweden hunters and wolves both have an interest in hunting moose. This thesis is therefore a contribution to the current carnivore-game conflict resulting from this interest. The use of a production function approach is applied in order to value the impact of wolves on hunting values. An open acc...

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Autor principal: Eggemann, Lea
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:sueco
Inglés
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8534/
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author Eggemann, Lea
author_browse Eggemann, Lea
author_facet Eggemann, Lea
author_sort Eggemann, Lea
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description In Sweden hunters and wolves both have an interest in hunting moose. This thesis is therefore a contribution to the current carnivore-game conflict resulting from this interest. The use of a production function approach is applied in order to value the impact of wolves on hunting values. An open access model is developed which derives a regression equation setting hunters’ harvest of moose per km2 as the dependent variable. Data on wolves, the moose harvest, hunting licenses and different Swedish game series is included in the analysis. Estimating empirically for the study period from 2002 to 2011, we identify the marginal product of wolves, the marginal cost in terms of loss in hunting revenues. We also compare the level of hunting effort with and without wolves in the system. This is done in the short term and for a steady-state equilibrium in the long term. The latter assumes a constant moose population and thus an effort adjustment by hunters. Our findings suggest a significant negative impact of the wolf on the moose harvest. When looking at both national data and different county groupings, there appear to be differences in marginal impacts as well as costs. Wolves in the counties with high wolf densities have lower marginal impacts than in counties with fewer wolves. This is reasonable, as wolf packs kill similar amounts of moose per year irrespective of their size. The marginal productivity of hunting effort did not vary much within and between groupings, whether there were wolves present or not. Under the current debate, this study adds in terms of shedding light on the change in hunters’ harvest revenues by wolves. However, the results do not consider social costs and thus conclusions for the wolf policy in Sweden have to be made with caution. Actions already attempt to address the conflict, yet it remains to be seen whether they are effective.
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spelling RepoSLU85342015-10-06T12:48:28Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8534/ The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden Eggemann, Lea Economics and management In Sweden hunters and wolves both have an interest in hunting moose. This thesis is therefore a contribution to the current carnivore-game conflict resulting from this interest. The use of a production function approach is applied in order to value the impact of wolves on hunting values. An open access model is developed which derives a regression equation setting hunters’ harvest of moose per km2 as the dependent variable. Data on wolves, the moose harvest, hunting licenses and different Swedish game series is included in the analysis. Estimating empirically for the study period from 2002 to 2011, we identify the marginal product of wolves, the marginal cost in terms of loss in hunting revenues. We also compare the level of hunting effort with and without wolves in the system. This is done in the short term and for a steady-state equilibrium in the long term. The latter assumes a constant moose population and thus an effort adjustment by hunters. Our findings suggest a significant negative impact of the wolf on the moose harvest. When looking at both national data and different county groupings, there appear to be differences in marginal impacts as well as costs. Wolves in the counties with high wolf densities have lower marginal impacts than in counties with fewer wolves. This is reasonable, as wolf packs kill similar amounts of moose per year irrespective of their size. The marginal productivity of hunting effort did not vary much within and between groupings, whether there were wolves present or not. Under the current debate, this study adds in terms of shedding light on the change in hunters’ harvest revenues by wolves. However, the results do not consider social costs and thus conclusions for the wolf policy in Sweden have to be made with caution. Actions already attempt to address the conflict, yet it remains to be seen whether they are effective. 2015-10-05 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf sv https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8534/1/Eggemann_L_151001.pdf Eggemann, Lea, 2015. The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden. Second cycle, A2E. Uppsala: (NL, NJ) > Dept. of Economics <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-510.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-4891 eng
spellingShingle Economics and management
Eggemann, Lea
The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden
title The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden
title_full The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden
title_fullStr The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden
title_short The economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in Sweden
title_sort economic impact of wolves on the moose harvest in sweden
topic Economics and management
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8534/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8534/