USGS economists and social scientists conduct economic and social science research in the context of natural resource management to deliver information used by resource managers to maximize and sustain economic and social benefits from natural resources to the American public.
Social and Economic Analyses Research
Economics of Wildland Fire
Economics and Ecosystem Services
Quantifying the effects of land-use change and bioenergy crop production on ecosystem services in the Northern Great Plains
Sustaining Environmental Capital Initiative (SECI)
Explore our science using the data below.
Qualitative value of information for the effects of prescribed fire in Gulf of Mexico marshes: Expert judgment scores from a 2020 adaptive management workshop
Synthesis of Gulf Coast Management Plans and Restoration Project Values, Stressors, and Strategies (2020-2021)
Multi-species, multi-country analysis reveals North Americans are willing to pay for transborder migratory species conservation, data
Decision-Support Framework for Linking Regional-Scale Management Actions to Continental-Scale Conservation of Wide-Ranging Species
Recent publications (2020-2022) related to USGS social and economic analyses research are listed below. A complete listing of USGS social and economic analyses publications is available from the button below.
Impacts of ocean-atmosphere teleconnection patterns on the south-central United States
Grassland conservation supports migratory birds and produces economic benefits for the commercial beekeeping industry in the U.S. Great Plains
Economic benefits supported by surface water in eastern Oregon’s Harney Basin
Elevating human dimensions of amphibian and reptile conservation, a USA perspective
Multi-species, multi-country analysis reveals North Americans are willing to pay for transborder migratory species conservation
Dam removal and river restoration
Economic assessment of surface water in the Harney Basin, Oregon
Tradeoffs in habitat value to maximize natural resource benefits from coastal restoration in a rapidly eroding wetland: Is monitoring land area sufficient?
Visitors count! Guidance for protected areas on the economic analysis of visitation
Assessing the population impacts and cost‐effectiveness of a conservation translocation
2020 National Park Visitor Spending Effects Economic Contributions to Local Communities, States,and the Nation
Economic effects assessment approaches: US National Parks approach
USGS economists and social scientists conduct economic and social science research in the context of natural resource management to deliver information used by resource managers to maximize and sustain economic and social benefits from natural resources to the American public.
Social and Economic Analyses Research
Economics of Wildland Fire
Economics and Ecosystem Services
Quantifying the effects of land-use change and bioenergy crop production on ecosystem services in the Northern Great Plains
Sustaining Environmental Capital Initiative (SECI)
Explore our science using the data below.
Qualitative value of information for the effects of prescribed fire in Gulf of Mexico marshes: Expert judgment scores from a 2020 adaptive management workshop
Synthesis of Gulf Coast Management Plans and Restoration Project Values, Stressors, and Strategies (2020-2021)
Multi-species, multi-country analysis reveals North Americans are willing to pay for transborder migratory species conservation, data
Decision-Support Framework for Linking Regional-Scale Management Actions to Continental-Scale Conservation of Wide-Ranging Species
Recent publications (2020-2022) related to USGS social and economic analyses research are listed below. A complete listing of USGS social and economic analyses publications is available from the button below.