Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs

Invasive species management can be a victim of its own success when decades of effective control cause memories of past harm to fade and raise questions of whether programs should continue. Economic analysis can be used to assess the efficiency of investing in invasive species control by comparing e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lisa A. Wainger, Nathan E. Harms, Cedric Magen, Dong Liang, Genevieve M. Nesslage, Anna M. McMurray, Al F. Cofrancesco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-05-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4824.pdf
id doaj-67df602b150e4fcfbbdf8c3367792b8e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-67df602b150e4fcfbbdf8c3367792b8e2020-11-24T22:54:15ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-05-016e482410.7717/peerj.4824Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costsLisa A. Wainger0Nathan E. Harms1Cedric Magen2Dong Liang3Genevieve M. Nesslage4Anna M. McMurray5Al F. Cofrancesco6Chesapeake Biological Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Solomons, MD, USAEngineer Research and Development Center, US Army Corps of Engineers, Vicksburg, MS, USAChesapeake Biological Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Solomons, MD, USAChesapeake Biological Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Solomons, MD, USAChesapeake Biological Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Solomons, MD, USAChesapeake Biological Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Solomons, MD, USAEngineer Research and Development Center, US Army Corps of Engineers, Vicksburg, MS, USAInvasive species management can be a victim of its own success when decades of effective control cause memories of past harm to fade and raise questions of whether programs should continue. Economic analysis can be used to assess the efficiency of investing in invasive species control by comparing ecosystem service benefits to program costs, but only if appropriate data exist. We used a case study of water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes (Mart.) Solms), a nuisance floating aquatic plant, in Louisiana to demonstrate how comprehensive record-keeping supports economic analysis. Using long-term data sets, we developed empirical and spatio-temporal simulation models of intermediate complexity to project invasive species growth for control and no-control scenarios. For Louisiana, we estimated that peak plant cover would be 76% higher without the substantial growth rate suppression (84% reduction) that appeared due primarily to biological control agents. Our economic analysis revealed that combined biological and herbicide control programs, monitored over an unusually long time period (1975–2013), generated a benefit-cost ratio of about 34:1 derived from the relatively modest costs of $124 million ($2013) compared to the $4.2 billion ($2013) in benefits to anglers, waterfowl hunters, boating-dependent businesses, and water treatment facilities over the 38-year analysis period. This work adds to the literature by: (1) providing evidence of the effectiveness of water hyacinth biological control; (2) demonstrating use of parsimonious spatio-temporal models to estimate benefits of invasive species control; and (3) incorporating activity substitution into economic benefit transfer to avoid overstating benefits. Our study suggests that robust and cost-effective economic analysis is enabled by good record keeping and generalizable models that can demonstrate management effectiveness and promote social efficiency of invasive species control.https://peerj.com/articles/4824.pdfCost benefit analysisSpatio-temporal simulation modelsEcosystem servicesEconomic benefitsBiological controlInvasive species
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lisa A. Wainger
Nathan E. Harms
Cedric Magen
Dong Liang
Genevieve M. Nesslage
Anna M. McMurray
Al F. Cofrancesco
spellingShingle Lisa A. Wainger
Nathan E. Harms
Cedric Magen
Dong Liang
Genevieve M. Nesslage
Anna M. McMurray
Al F. Cofrancesco
Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs
PeerJ
Cost benefit analysis
Spatio-temporal simulation models
Ecosystem services
Economic benefits
Biological control
Invasive species
author_facet Lisa A. Wainger
Nathan E. Harms
Cedric Magen
Dong Liang
Genevieve M. Nesslage
Anna M. McMurray
Al F. Cofrancesco
author_sort Lisa A. Wainger
title Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs
title_short Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs
title_full Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs
title_fullStr Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs
title_full_unstemmed Evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs
title_sort evidence-based economic analysis demonstrates that ecosystem service benefits of water hyacinth management greatly exceed research and control costs
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Invasive species management can be a victim of its own success when decades of effective control cause memories of past harm to fade and raise questions of whether programs should continue. Economic analysis can be used to assess the efficiency of investing in invasive species control by comparing ecosystem service benefits to program costs, but only if appropriate data exist. We used a case study of water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes (Mart.) Solms), a nuisance floating aquatic plant, in Louisiana to demonstrate how comprehensive record-keeping supports economic analysis. Using long-term data sets, we developed empirical and spatio-temporal simulation models of intermediate complexity to project invasive species growth for control and no-control scenarios. For Louisiana, we estimated that peak plant cover would be 76% higher without the substantial growth rate suppression (84% reduction) that appeared due primarily to biological control agents. Our economic analysis revealed that combined biological and herbicide control programs, monitored over an unusually long time period (1975–2013), generated a benefit-cost ratio of about 34:1 derived from the relatively modest costs of $124 million ($2013) compared to the $4.2 billion ($2013) in benefits to anglers, waterfowl hunters, boating-dependent businesses, and water treatment facilities over the 38-year analysis period. This work adds to the literature by: (1) providing evidence of the effectiveness of water hyacinth biological control; (2) demonstrating use of parsimonious spatio-temporal models to estimate benefits of invasive species control; and (3) incorporating activity substitution into economic benefit transfer to avoid overstating benefits. Our study suggests that robust and cost-effective economic analysis is enabled by good record keeping and generalizable models that can demonstrate management effectiveness and promote social efficiency of invasive species control.
topic Cost benefit analysis
Spatio-temporal simulation models
Ecosystem services
Economic benefits
Biological control
Invasive species
url https://peerj.com/articles/4824.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT lisaawainger evidencebasedeconomicanalysisdemonstratesthatecosystemservicebenefitsofwaterhyacinthmanagementgreatlyexceedresearchandcontrolcosts
AT nathaneharms evidencebasedeconomicanalysisdemonstratesthatecosystemservicebenefitsofwaterhyacinthmanagementgreatlyexceedresearchandcontrolcosts
AT cedricmagen evidencebasedeconomicanalysisdemonstratesthatecosystemservicebenefitsofwaterhyacinthmanagementgreatlyexceedresearchandcontrolcosts
AT dongliang evidencebasedeconomicanalysisdemonstratesthatecosystemservicebenefitsofwaterhyacinthmanagementgreatlyexceedresearchandcontrolcosts
AT genevievemnesslage evidencebasedeconomicanalysisdemonstratesthatecosystemservicebenefitsofwaterhyacinthmanagementgreatlyexceedresearchandcontrolcosts
AT annammcmurray evidencebasedeconomicanalysisdemonstratesthatecosystemservicebenefitsofwaterhyacinthmanagementgreatlyexceedresearchandcontrolcosts
AT alfcofrancesco evidencebasedeconomicanalysisdemonstratesthatecosystemservicebenefitsofwaterhyacinthmanagementgreatlyexceedresearchandcontrolcosts
_version_ 1725661168705470464