Aquatic Species
Aquatic Nuisance
Species Impacts
Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force.
Biological Invasions in Aquatic Systems: The Economic Problem (PDF | 251 KB)
Arizona State University.
Economic and Ecological Costs Associated with Aquatic Invasive Species (May 20, 2003)
Sea Grant Nonindigenous Species Site.
D. Pimentel, Proceedings of the Aquatic Invaders of the Delaware Estuary Symposium
Economic Impacts of Aquatic Invasive Species Workshop
EPA. Office of Water; Office of Policy, Economics and Innovation.
Jul 20-21, 2005
Washington, D.C.
Co-hosted by EPA Office of Water and the Office of Policy, Economics and Innovation
Invasive Species in Aquatic Ecosystems: Economics and Matrix Population Models (2005; PDF | 192 KB)
University of New England. Graduate School of Agricultural and Resource Economics & School of Economics.
Great
Lakes Region Losing $200 Million a Year to Invasive
Species (PDF | 27 KB) (Jul 17,
2008)
Great Lakes United.
A U.S. study
conducted by the Center
for Aquatic Conservation at the University
of Notre Dame and University of Wyoming
suggests invasive species brought in by ocean-going
ships may be costing the Great Lakes region
more than $200 million a year in losses to commerical
fishing, sport fishing, and the area's water
supply.
Summary of a Survey of the Literature on the Economic Impact of Aquatic Weeds (Aug 2003; PDF | 80 KB)
Aquatic Ecosystem Restoration Foundation.
H. William Rockwell, Jr., Ph. D, for the Aquatic Ecosystem Restoration Foundation
The Economic Impact of Invasive Species
Great Lakes United.
The
Economic Impacts of Aquatic Invasive Species: A Review of the Literature
(Jan 2005; PDF | 147 KB)
Environmental Protection Agency.
Sabrina J. Lovell and Susan F. Stone, National
Center for Environmental Economics
|