Publication | Closed Access
Greenbelts in the Cornbelt: Riparian Wetlands, Intrinsic Values, and Market Failure
60
Citations
18
References
1990
Year
Natural Resource ValuationLand UseAgricultural EconomicsEnvironmental EconomicsLand DegradationEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesHistorical Agricultural PracticesGreen InfrastructureEcosystem ManagementIntrinsic ValuesRiparian WetlandsRiver Basin ManagementRiver RestorationEcosystem ImpactMarket FailureNatural Resource ManagementWetland BuffersBusinessNatural Resource EconomicsNonmarket ValuationLand ConservationWater Valuation
Historical agricultural practices have severely undermined the recreational quality and ecological integrity of Midwestern streams, rivers, and reservoirs. Reestablishing riparian forest corridors would create wetland buffers partially protecting water quality and aquatic ecosystems from agricultural runoff. On the basis of an explicitly spatial market-failure model of land use in the riparian (floodplain) zone, contingent valuation survey methods are used to estimate the recreational and intrinsic benefits of improved ‘river quality’ in selected Iowa and Illinois river basins. It is found that willingness to pay for river quality is related to income and recreational participation, but not to other spatial or socioeconomic variables. Intrinsic values are found to be expressible as economic values similar to that of other public goods. Together with recreational values, they are larger on a per-acre basis, in many instances, than the production of agricultural commodities. This suggests that the purpose of programs such as the Conservation Reserve Program should be enlarged from their present focus on soil conservation to include water quality, aquatic ecosystems, and intrinsic values.
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