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U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Addendum to the 2001National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation Report 2001-3 Richard Aiken and Genevieve Pullis La Rouche Division of Federal Aid U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Washington, D.C. Division of Federal Aid U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Washington, D.C. 20240 Director, Steve Williams Chief, Division of Federal Aid, Kris La Montagne http://fa.r9.fws.gov/ This report is intended to complement the National and State reports from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. The conclusions are the authors and do not represent official positions of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Addendum to the 2001National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation Report 2001-3 September 2003 U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Abstract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 I. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 II. Measures of Economic Value . . . . . . . 4 III. Contingent Valuation . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 IV. Estimated Net Economic Values. . . . 6 V. Using the Value Estimates . . . . . . . . . 16 VI. Concluding Comments . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Appendix A. Contingent Valuation Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Appendix B. Annual Net Economic Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Appendix C. Sample Sizes . . . . . . . . . . . 23 This report presents state estimates of the net economic values for smallmouth and largemouth bass, trout and walleye fishing, deer, elk and moose hunting, and nonresidential wildlife watching. These values are based on contingent valuation questions from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. Each state was classified as either a bass, trout or walleye state. Based on these classifications, anglers were asked to answer a contingent valuation question for their bass, trout, or walleye fishing during 2001. Likewise, each state was classified as either a deer, elk or moose state. Based on these classifications, hunters were asked contingent valuation questions for their 2001 hunts. People who took trips in 2001 to watch wildlife at least one mile from their residence were asked contingent valuation questions for these activities. The net economic values reported here are developed for current resource conditions. They are appropriate measures of economic value for use in cost-benefit analyses, damage assessments, and project evaluations. 2 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Contents Abstract David Hefferman, USFWS Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 3 The National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation (Survey hereafter) is a comprehensive source of data on people’s use of wildlife resources that has been collected on a national level since 1955 and on a state level since 1975. The first time the Survey collected net economic value data was in 1980. The effort was repeated, with some changes, in the 1985, 1991, 1996, and 2001 Surveys. This report presents estimates of net economic values for smallmouth and largemouth bass, trout and walleye fishing, deer, elk and moose hunting, and nonresidential wildlife watching. These values were derived from contingent valuation questions asked in the 2001 Survey. The report also compares the 2001 values with those of the 1980 and 1985 Surveys which used a similar contingent valuation methodology. Bass fishing refers to smallmouth and largemouth bass and excludes white bass, spotted bass, striped bass, striped bass hybrids, and rock bass. Trout fishing refers to all freshwater species commonly known as trout. Nonresidential wildlife watching refers to trips at least one mile from home taken for the primary purpose of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife (wildlife watching hereafter). The last five Surveys varied in the types of fishing and hunting asked for each state and in the methods and procedures used for contingent valuation. Regarding fishing, the 1980 Survey asked only trout fishing valuation questions for each state whereas the 1985 Survey asked only bass fishing valuation questions. The 1991 Survey assigned states as either primarily bass fishing or primarily trout fishing. A person who lived in a bass state was asked a bass fishing valuation question and was not asked a trout valuation question, and vice versa for a person who lived in a trout state. The 1996 and 2001 Surveys selected states in the upper Midwest as walleye states and the rest of the states as either trout fishing or bass fishing states. In 1980, all states were designated both deer and waterfowl states for valuation questions. In 1985, all states again were designated both deer and waterfowl states, and elk hunting valuation questions were asked for the northwestern and northern Rocky Mountain states. In 1991, all states were designated as deer hunting. In 1996 and 2001 selected states in the northwest and northern Rocky Mountains were designated as elk states, Alaska was designated as a moose state, and the remainder as deer states. Wildlife watching valuation questions were asked in 1985, 1991, 1996, and 2001. Respondents were asked about the trips they took for the primary purpose of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife. Another change in the Surveys deals with respondents’ state-assigned activity status. When a person answered a valuation question in the 1991 and earlier Surveys, their valuation response was assigned to their state of residence. Thus, a person from Michigan who hunted deer would have their deer valuation response assigned to Michigan even if they hunted deer in another state (e.g., mule deer in Utah). In the 1996 and 2001 Surveys, responses were assigned to the state where the activity occurred. Thus, with the example above, the response by a person from Michigan who hunted deer in Utah would be assigned to Utah. A third difference among the Surveys is the contingent valuation method itself. In 1980 and 1985, an open-ended approach was used, which essentially consisted of directly asking respondents how much was their total willingness to pay for a typical trip. In 1991 and 1996 a dichotomous choice method was used, in which the respondents were asked if they would have taken any trips if their total costs were some predetermined amount more than what they had actually paid. For the 2001 Survey, the open-ended approach was used again. Therefore comparison of 2001 values with 1980 and 1985 values is a more reliable comparison than with 1991 and 1996 values because the valuation questions were similar. The following section discusses the conceptual framework for net economic values of wildlife-related recreation, differentiating between net economic values and economic impacts. The third section describes the contingent valuation questions used in the Survey and steps that were taken in analyzing the data. The fourth section consists of value estimates for deer, elk and moose hunting, bass, trout and walleye fishing, and wildlife watching. This section also briefly compares the 2001 estimates with those from 1985 and 1980. The fifth section discusses how to use the value estimates presented, and the last section provides concluding comments. I. Introduction Carl Zitsman, USFWS In 2001 82 million Americans 16 years old and older fished, hunted, photographed, fed, and closely observed wildlife in the U.S. These wildlife enthusiasts spent $28.1 billion on trips to participate in these activities. Expenditures are a useful indicator of the importance of wildlife-related recreation to local, regional, and national economies. However, they do not measure the economic benefit to either the individual participant or, when aggregated, to society. Expenditures and net economic values are two widely used but distinctly different measures of the economic value of wildlife-related recreation. Net willingness to pay, or “consumer surplus”, is the accepted measure of the economic value of wildlife-related recreation to the individual recreationist and to society. It is the appropriate measure of economic value for a wide range of analyses that seek to quantify benefits and costs. Net economic value is measured as participants’ willingness to pay for wildlife-related recreation over and above what they actually spend to participate. The benefit to society is the summation of willingness to pay across all individuals. There is a direct relationship between expenditures and net economic value, as shown in Figure 1. A demand curve for a representative hunter is shown in the figure. An individual hunter’s demand curve gives the number of trips the hunter would take per year for each different cost per trip. The downward sloping demand curve represents marginal willingness to pay per trip and indicates that each additional trip is valued less by the hunter than the preceding trip. All other factors being equal, the lower the cost per trip (vertical axis) the more trips the hunter will take (horizontal axis). The cost of a hunting trip serves as an implicit price for hunting since a market price generally does not exist for this activity. At $60 per trip, the hunter would choose not to hunt, but if hunting trips were free, the hunter would take 16 hunting trips. At a cost per trip of $20 the hunter takes 10 trips, with a total willingness to pay of $375 (area acde in Figure 1). Total willingness to pay is the total value the hunter places on participation. The hunter will not take more than 10 trips because the cost per trip ($20) exceeds what he would pay for an additional trip. For each trip between zero and 10, however, the hunter would actually have been willing to pay more than $20 (the demand curve, showing marginal willingness to pay, lies above $20). The difference between what the hunter is willing to pay and what is actually paid is net economic value. In this simple example, therefore, net economic value is $175 (($55 – $20) × 10 ÷ 2) (triangle bcd in Figure 1) and hunter expenditures are $200 ($20 × 10) (rectangle abde in Figure 1). Thus, the hunter’s total willingness to pay is composed of net economic value and total expenditures. Net economic value is simply total willingness to pay minus expenditures. The relationship between net economic value and expenditures is the basis for asserting that net economic value is an appropriate measure of the benefit an individual derives from participation in an activity and that expenditures are not the appropriate benefit measure. Expenditures are out-of-pocket expenses on items a hunter purchases in order to hunt. The remaining value, net willingness to pay (net economic value), is the economic measure of an individual’s satisfaction after all costs of participation have been paid. Summing the net economic values of all individuals who participate in an activity derives the value to society. For our example let us assume that there are 100 hunters who hunt at a particular wildlife management area and all have demand curves identical to that of our typical hunter presented in Figure 1. The total value per year of this wildlife management area to society is $17,500 ($175 × 100). The example developed for hunting could have been developed in the context of fishing or wildlife watching. The basic concept of net economic value is the same for all three activities. 4 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 II. Measures of Economic Value Figure 1. Individual Hunter’s Demand Curve for Hunting Trips Cost per Trip ($) Trips per Year 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 5 10 15 20 b a e d c Expenditures Net Economic Value Respondents to the 2001 Survey who had gone deer, elk or moose hunting, bass, trout, or walleye fishing, or wildlife watching were asked a series of contingent valuation (CV) questions during their personal interview as a basis for determining their net willingness to pay for those activities. Questions were designed to find the respondent’s cost per trip in 2001, whether they would have continued to go had the cost been higher, and at what cost per trip they would not have gone at all in 2001 because it would have been too expensive (Appendix A presents the hunting and wildlife watching CV question series, as examples). Respondents first were asked to estimate the number of trips they had taken in 2001 to hunt or fish for the designated species. For wildlife watching the number of trips was obtained from an earlier section of the questionnaire. Respondents then were asked to consider expenses such as transportation, food and lodging, and to estimate what their cost had been in 2001 for a typical trip1. Then they were asked at what cost per trip they would not have gone at all because it was too expensive. The question stipulated that the cost of other kinds of recreational activities that could be considered substitutes would not have changed. In terms of Figure 1 the purpose of the question sequence is to have the respondent react as if he were moving up the demand curve, taking fewer trips as the cost per trip increased until he was priced out of the market at the cost per trip where the demand curve intersects the vertical axis. Assuming a linear demand curve, annual net economic value is then calculated using the difference between current cost ($20) and the maximum cost at the intercept ($55), and the number of trips taken in 2001 (10). Using the example in Figure 1, annual net economic value is ($55 – $20) × 10 2 = $175 = The average value per trip is that amount divided by the number of trips, or $175 ÷ 10 = $17.50 per trip The valuation sequence was posed in terms of number of trips and cost per trip because respondents were thought more likely to think of their wildlife-related recreation in terms of trips rather than days, the unit most commonly used in project evaluation. The economic values reported here are in terms of days to facilitate their use in analysis. The values are averages in two senses of the word. First, they are the arithmetic mean of the responses of all respondents in the sample, usually all those residing in a particular state who participated in the activity, e.g., all survey respondents who were Colorado residents and hunted elk in Colorado. Second, they are average values in that they are calculated for each respondent by dividing his total annual consumer surplus for an activity by the number of days he participated during 2001. Zero and negative net willingness-to-pay responses were deleted from the analysis, as were unreasonably high willingness-to- pay responses. Likely explanations of zero and negative willingness to pay are that the question was misunderstood by the respondent, incorrectly recorded by the interviewer, or that the response was a protest against higher costs rather than a legitimate bid, perhaps motivated by fear of an increase in the cost of a hunting or fishing license. To the extent that legitimate zero responses were among those deleted, the resulting values will be overestimates. Willingness to pay for wildlife-related recreation or, for that matter, anything a consumer buys, must be limited by some measure of an individual’s income and/or wealth. A person clearly is not able to pay some multiple of his household’s annual income for deer hunting, for example. In a less extreme situation, it is possible that a truly avid deer hunter would actually be willing to pay a significant portion of his income to continue hunting deer even though the costs of substitute activities such as small game hunting would be unchanged. Since the purpose of the analysis is to use the CV responses as representative of the typical recreationist in the group rather than calculating the sample’s aggregate net economic value, mitigating the effect of those extreme values on the sample mean is essential. Observations were dropped from the samples if the annual net economic value for an activity exceeded five percent of the individual’s household income. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 5 III. Contingent Valuation Jim Palmer, USFWS 1Wildlife watchers were given the dollar figure per trip which they had reported earlier in the interview. If the respondent did not think this was accurate he or she could change it. Tables 1 through 7 give state-by-state net economic values and standard errors for a day of deer, elk and moose hunting, bass, trout, and walleye fishing, and wildlife watching. There are several important things to know about the estimates. They are mean responses for net economic value per day based on the respondent’s state of activity. Each table gives the values of state residents and nonresidents. Because they are based on samples of recreationists, the values in the tables are estimates of the true population means and should be considered in relation to their standard errors and corresponding confidence intervals. The 95 percent confidence intervals are the estimated mean plus or minus roughly two times the standard error of the mean. Confidence intervals serve as indicators of the reliability of estimates. A 95 percent confidence interval means that the true value falls within that range in 95 out of 100 samples of the same size. An example of the use of the 95 percent confidence interval is the seemingly large difference in the mean value of a day of deer hunting by Texas residents ($76 per day) in comparison with that of Oklahoma residents ($56 per day). In reality the two values are not statistically different because their 95 percent confidence intervals overlap. Sample sizes and the degree of variation of responses within the samples are the primary reasons that some state confidence intervals are narrower than others. Sample sizes varied significantly across states. Values are not reported based on samples of less than ten observations. In all the tables, there is substantial variation in mean value from one state to the next even after deleting extreme responses. Confidence intervals can help in interpreting these apparent differences. For example, the 95 percent confidence interval of the Kansas state resident bass fishing per day mean ($13 to $29) and that of the mean in neighboring Oklahoma ($18 to $48) overlap. Thus, the two means ($20 for Kansas and $33 for Oklahoma) are not statistically different at that level of significance. However, the 95% confidence intervals for Kansas ($13 to $29) and Missouri ($30 to $76) do not overlap, so the difference in the means for Kansas ($20) and Missouri ($52) bass fishing net economic values can be interpreted as a true difference. 6 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 IV. Estimated Net Economic Values Eugene Hester, USFWS Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 7 Table 1. Deer Hunting Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 56 2 52-60 76 8 61-92 Alabama 110* 30 51-169 57* 41 –24-138 Arizona 67* 14 39-95 … Arkansas 36 7 22-50 … Connecticut 49* 25 0-98 … Georgia 30* 9 14-47 … Illinois 54* 22 9-98 … Indiana 54* 14 26-82 … Iowa 52 10 33-71 … Kansas 38 7 25-51 … Kentucky 53 15 23-83 … Louisiana 75* 29 18-132 … Maine 63 17 30-96 39* 9 21-56 Maryland 71* 28 14-127 … Massachusetts 48* 17 15-82 … Michigan 53 11 33-74 … Minnesota 46 10 26-65 … Mississippi 69* 41 –11-149 28* 10 10-47 Missouri 36 8 21-51 68* 17 34-101 Nebraska 92 24 44-139 … Nevada 73* 35 5-141 … New Hampshire 40 10 21-59 143* 74 –4-289 New Mexico 86 37 13-158 … New York 47 11 26-68 111* 45 23-200 North Carolina 58* 15 27-88 … North Dakota 47 5 36-58 … Ohio 79 18 43-114 … Oklahoma 56 19 21-92 … Pennsylvania 47 7 33-60 116* 29 58-174 South Carolina 35 9 19-52 … South Dakota 67 13 42-92 … Tennessee 33* 7 19-47 23* 7 10-36 Texas 76 16 46-107 122* 37 49-195 Utah 53 8 38-69 … Vermont 28 4 19-35 21* 8 5-37 Virginia 104* 42 21-186 60* 62 –61-181 Washington 54 11 33-75 … West Virginia 52 12 30-76 62* 26 11-113 Wisconsin 46 6 34-58 76* 56 –33-186 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample sizes for California, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, and Rhode Island were too small to report state resident values reliably. 8 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 2. Elk Hunting Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 84 15 55-113 120 32 57-182 Colorado 112 61 –9-232 110* 51 9-211 Idaho 60 17 26-94 … Montana 86 31 26-147 … Oregon 76 13 51-102 … Wyoming 61 13 36-86 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table 3. Moose Hunting Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Alaska 118* 28 61-174 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table 4. Bass Fishing Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 48 3 41-54 72 10 52-92 Alabama 31 8 15-47 63* 49 –32-158 Arkansas 61 15 33-90 49* 22 7-92 Delaware 30* 9 13-48 … Florida 67 20 28-106 53* 22 11-96 Georgia 55 19 19-91 … Illinois 52 19 17-88 … Indiana 36 7 22-49 … Iowa 34 9 16-52 … Kansas 20 4 13-29 … Kentucky 61 22 17-105 216* 104 11-420 Louisiana 43 15 14-72 … Maryland 87 44 2-173 42* 22 –2-85 Massachusetts 36 11 14-58 … Mississippi 29 7 16-42 … Missouri 52 12 30-76 48* 7 35-61 Nebraska 37 7 23-51 … North Carolina 52* 25 3-101 31* 11 10-53 Oklahoma 33 8 18-48 … Rhode Island 24* 7 11-38 … South Carolina 58 16 26-89 … Tennessee 53 18 18-88 55* 15 25-85 Texas 56 22 12-99 97* 52 –6-200 Virginia 25 5 14-36 56* 38 –18-130 West Virginia 25 6 14-37 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 9 Table 5. Trout Fishing Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 51 3 45-57 91 13 65-116 Alaska 85 32 22-148 … Arizona 52 10 33-71 … California 58 9 40-76 52 16 21-83 Colorado 53 13 28-79 56 9 40-73 Connecticut 33 11 12-55 … Idaho 60 19 24-97 162 87 –7-332 Maine 53 14 25-81 88* 41 7-169 Montana 31 5 20-41 184 61 64-304 Nevada 43 11 22-64 … New Hampshire 35 6 22-47 95* 37 23-168 New Jersey 56* 28 1-111 … New Mexico 68 26 15-119 … New York 38* 14 10-66 123* 44 36-209 Oregon 40 13 15-65 62* 18 27-97 Pennsylvania 61 25 12-110 81* 38 6-155 Utah 44 9 27-61 69* 14 41-97 Vermont 29 8 13-45 … Washington 44 8 29-60 … Wyoming 38 7 25-52 63 17 31-96 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table 6. Walleye Fishing Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 44 6 32-57 75 11 53-96 Michigan 26* 8 11-41 … Minnesota 48 11 27-69 70 11 48-92 North Dakota 37 12 13-61 26* 12 4-50 Ohio 45 9 26-63 … South Dakota 30 4 21-39 44* 16 13-75 Wisconsin 52 26 2-103 81* 26 31-131 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. 10 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 7. Wildlife Watching Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 35 2 32-39 134 12 110-158 Alabama 31* 15 2-61 … Alaska 114 45 26-202 … Arizona 34 6 21-46 … Arkansas 20* 9 2-37 … California 39 8 24-54 64* 14 36-91 Colorado 33 7 20-46 290* 211 –122-703 Connecticut 18 4 11-27 … Delaware 10* 4 3-19 … Florida 41 19 4-77 192* 85 24-359 Georgia 51* 20 14-90 … Hawaii 29* 9 11-46 … Idaho 26 10 6-46 117* 84 –49-282 Illinois 11* 2 7-15 63* 26 12-114 Indiana 36 9 18-53 … Iowa 20* 6 8-32 … Kansas 35 16 4-66 … Kentucky 26* 13 –1-52 … Louisiana 38* 11 16-59 … Maine 35 16 4-67 139* 47 47-231 Maryland 66 18 30-101 116* 44 30-203 Massachusetts 21* 4 14-28 73* 33 8-137 Michigan 23* 7 8-37 ��� Minnesota 46* 33 –18-111 … Missouri 19 3 13-25 … Montana 18 4 11-25 … Nebraska 57 20 20-96 … Nevada 41* 16 9-73 … New Hampshire 27 7 14-40 151* 61 32-271 New Jersey 34 6 22-46 … New Mexico 42 8 27-57 … New York 52 20 11-92 75* 26 26-125 North Carolina 55* 28 –2-111 90* 41 9-171 North Dakota 33* 12 11-57 … Ohio 22 4 12-31 … Oklahoma 18* 3 13-24 … Oregon 34 7 22-47 120* 60 3-237 Pennsylvania 31 10 12-50 145* 55 37-252 Rhode Island 29* 16 –1-60 … South Carolina 29* 11 8-50 … South Dakota 22* 5 11-33 … Tennessee 19* 5 9-29 322* 143 42-602 Texas 34* 15 5-64 … Utah 27 6 16-39 96* 27 44-148 Vermont 38 21 –3-79 134* 85 –34-301 Virginia 55* 14 27-83 185* 61 64-305 Washington 50 8 33-66 78* 27 23-132 West Virginia 47* 35 –21-115 … Wisconsin 44 11 23-65 … Wyoming 31 10 13-50 54* 28 –1-109 ��� Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample size for Mississippi was too small to report the state resident value reliably. State Comparisons in Net Economic Values Over Time State-by-state comparisons of deer hunting, bass and trout fishing, and wildlife watching values for 1980, 1985, and 2001 show nearly all values to be similar. See the Summary Table at left for the few states that had significant differences (at the .05 level of significance) in values over time. The similar estimates from the 1980’s compared to 2001 show that these estimates are stable, making them reliable indicators of the value of wildlife-related recreation. It should be noted that the 1980 and 1985 values were for state residents participating anywhere in the U.S., while the 2001 values were for state residents participating in their state of residence. Given that for any given year most participation occurs within the resident state, this difference in methodology is not critical. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 11 Summary Table. States with Significant Differences in Net Economic Values Over Time (2001 dollars) 1980 1985 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Deer hunting Alabama 32 41 110 Bass fishing Arkansas 20 61 Florida 21 67 Indiana 18 36 Nebraska 17 37 South Carolina 21 52 Trout fishing Arizona 24 52 California 34 58 Maine 19 53 New Hampshire 15 35 Utah 24 44 Washington 24 44 Wildlife watching Delaware 41 10 Idaho 68 26 Illinois 31 11 Montana 31 18 Tennessee 56 19 Note: The 1980 Survey did not measure net economic values for bass fishing or wildlife watching and the 1985 Survey did not measure values for trout fishing. Of all the designated deer hunting states, only Alabama had a 2001 value that was significantly higher than those of 1980 and 1985 (Table 8). None of the 2001 numbers were significantly lower (at the .05 significance) than the 1980 and 1985 values. There are no value comparisons with the 1991 and 1996 Surveys because there were no values at the state level from the 1996 Survey, and the 1991 Survey used the dichotomous method, which is a significantly different approach to valuing wildlife-related recreation. All dollar values in this report are in 2001 dollars. 12 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 8. Deer Hunting 1980, 1985, and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 Dollars) Out-of-Stater’s State Resident Values Values 1980 1985 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alabama 32 41 110* 57*+ Arizona 52 64 67* … Arkansas 37 50 36 … California 54 69 … … Connecticut 39 51 49* … Delaware 43 41 … … Florida 34 89 … … Georgia 37 45 30* … Illinois 47 54 54* … Indiana 32 45 54* … Iowa 37 61 52 … Kansas 34 40 38 … Kentucky 45 53 53 … Louisiana 41 45 75* … Maine 30 40 63 39* Maryland 47 64 71* … Massachusetts 39 69 48* … Michigan 32 56 53 … Minnesota 43 51 46 … Mississippi 32 36 69*+ 28* Missouri 39 43 36 68* Nebraska 47 53 92 … Nevada 60 96 73* … New Hampshire 28 35 40 143* New Jersey 45 61 … … New Mexico 60 81 86 … New York 32 40 47 111* North Carolina 39 40 58* … North Dakota 49 46 47 … Ohio 43 46 79 … Oklahoma 43 56 56 … Pennsylvania 45 53 47 116* Rhode Island 41* 64* … … South Carolina 32 43 35 … South Dakota 49 43 67 … Tennessee 30 48 33* 23* Texas 56 64 76 122* Utah 43 68 53 … Vermont 30 35 28 21* Virginia 34 45 104* 60*+ Washington 37 46 54 … West Virginia 43 51 52 62* Wisconsin 34 53 46 76*+ … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. + 95% confidence interval includes zero. For the designated bass fishing states, 5 of 24 states had 2001 values that were significantly higher than 1985 values (Table 9). These states were Arkansas, Florida, Indiana, Nebraska, and South Carolina. There were no decreases in values for bass fishing by state. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 13 Table 9. Bass Fishing 1985 and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 dollars) State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values 1985 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alabama 21 31 63*+ Arkansas 20 61 49* Delaware 21 30* … Florida 21 67 53* Georgia 23 55 … Illinois 36 52 … Indiana 18 36 … Iowa 17 34 … Kansas 17* 20 … Kentucky 21 61 216* Louisiana 33 43 … Maryland 23 87 42* Massachusetts 15 36 … Mississippi 15 29 … Missouri 31 52 48* Nebraska 17 37 … North Carolina 21 52* 31* Oklahoma 18 33 … Rhode Island 21 24* … South Carolina 15 58 … Tennessee 18 53 55* Texas 31 56 97* Virginia 20 25 56*+ West Virginia 21 25 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. + 95% confidence interval includes zero. Six of 19 states with trout fishing values for 1980 and 2001 had 2001 values that were significantly higher than 1980 values (Table 10). These states were Arizona, California, Maine, New Hampshire, Utah, and Washington. There were no decreases from 1980 to 2001 in trout fishing values by state. 14 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 10. Trout Fishing 1980 and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 dollars) State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values 1980 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alaska 60* 85 … Arizona 24 52 … California 34 58 52 Colorado 28 53 56 Connecticut 17 33 … Idaho 22 60 162 Maine 19 53 88* Montana 26 31 184 Nevada 24 43 … New Hampshire 15 35 95* New Jersey 22 56* … New Mexico 30 68 … New York 19 38* 123* Oregon 26 40 62* Pennsylvania 17 61 81* Utah 24 44 69* Vermont 15 29 … Washington 24 44 … Wyoming 32 38 63 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Five of 49 states with wildlife-watching values for 1985 and 2001 had 2001 values that were significantly lower than 1985 values (Table 11). These states were Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Montana, and Tennessee. In no state were there statistically significantly higher estimates in 2001 compared to 1985. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 15 Table 11. Wildlife Watching 1985 and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 Dollars) State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values 1985 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alabama 21 31* … Alaska 40 114 … Arizona 50 34 … Arkansas 20 20* … California 53 39 64* Colorado 43 33 290* Connecticut 31 18 … Delaware 41 10* … Florida 26 41 192* Georgia 43 51* … Hawaii 45 29* … Idaho 68 26 117* Illinois 31 11* 63* Indiana 46 36 … Iowa 21 20* … Kansas 23 35 … Kentucky 25 26* … Louisiana 17 38* … Maine 17 35 139* Maryland 40 66 116* Massachusetts 35 21 73* Michigan 33 23* … Minnesota 33 46*+ … Mississippi 20 … … Missouri 23 19 … Montana 31 18 … Nebraska 18 57 … Nevada 41 41* … New Hampshire 30 27 151* New Jersey 46 34 … New Mexico 48 42 … New York 26 52 75* North Carolina 23 55* 90* North Dakota 36 33* … Ohio 21 22 … Oklahoma 18 18* … Oregon 25 34 120* Pennsylvania 40 31 145* Rhode Island 35 29* … South Carolina 56 29* … South Dakota 21 22* … Tennessee 56 19* 322* Texas 40 34* … Utah 35 27 96* Vermont 30 38+ 134* Virginia 35 55* 185* Washington 33 50 78* West Virginia 28 47*+ … Wisconsin 25* 44 … Wyoming 38 31 54* … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. + 95% confidence interval includes zero. 16 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 When and how can these values be used? These numbers are appropriate for any project evaluation that seeks to quantify benefits and costs. They can be used to evaluate management actions that increase or decrease participation. Two types of willingness-to-pay values are available, net economic values per day per participant and net economic values per year of participation. Each of these values has a slightly different use and interpretation in conducting benefit and cost calculations of wildlife management and policy decisions. Mean net economic values per year per participant can be thought of as “all or nothing values.” Take trout fishing in Montana as an example, with a mean value of $282 (Table B-5 in Appendix B). The $282 represents the mean value to a resident trout angler in Montana given the current resource condition and trout fishing regulations. This is like the estimate of net economic value portrayed in Figure 1. If a wildlife refuge in Montana changes its policies and allows 100 more trout anglers to visit per year, the total value to society due to this policy change would be $28,200 ($282 × 100) per year (assuming all visitors are state residents). This value, however, assumes that these 100 anglers could and would fish for trout only at this refuge and that they would take a certain number of trips to this refuge. Thus, while mean net economic values per year per participant are interesting in terms of characterizing the current value of the resource and in calculating losses for a catastrophic change in the resource, they are not applicable for most management and public policy decisions faced by resource managers. Management and policy actions generally increase or decrease participation. Let us continue with the Montana example. Assume an environmental pollution accident results in the closure of a lake to fishing for a whole season. If a fishery manager knows the number of days of state resident fishing that occur on the lake over the whole season, 1,200 for example, it is possible to develop a rough estimate of the fishery losses from the accident. This estimate is accomplished by multiplying the net economic value per day ($31 from Table 5) by the days of participation, resulting in $37,200 ($31 × 1,200). If the refuge had data on the number of in-state and out-of-state visitors then the numbers could be adjusted to reflect their appropriate value. Two caveats exist to the examples above: (1) if recreationists can shift their activity to another location then the values are an overestimate; and (2) if a loss of wildlife habitat causes an overall degradation in the number of game, fish, or wildlife and in the quality of wildlife-related recreation then the values are an underestimate. The key issues that must be understood are: ■ Each of the different value estimates has slightly different interpretations and uses; ■ If an action changes participation, it is necessary to consider the extent to which participants substitute another site to fish, hunt, or wildlife watch. Failure to consider substitution will result in overestimation of resource losses; and ■ Using per participant value estimates to compute losses or benefits requires additional information, particularly on resource conditions and participation rates. Thus, the value estimates reported here must be used with caution in order to avoid misuse, which would result in incorrect estimates of aggregate costs or aggregate benefits. V. Using the Value Estimates USFWS Contingent valuation questions in the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation provide a nationwide data base for estimating net economic recreation values for selected wildlife-related recreation activities on a state-by-state basis. The data and the values they produce are important because they measure recreationists’ net willingness to pay for such activities, the conceptually correct measure of net economic value for a wide range of analyses and project evaluations. Because they are available for individual states, the values allow for differences in recreation values in various parts of the country. For many kinds of analysis, using values that reflect wildlife-related recreation in the state in question rather than some other state or a national average gives the analysis a better and more convincing empirical base. In this age of cost-benefit analysis these estimates can be used to justify the value of wildlife-related recreation. Be it deer hunting, trout fishing, or wildlife watching, the numbers prove that Americans benefit greatly from wildlife. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 17 VI. Concluding Comments Fred Deines, USFWS Hunting Economic Evaluation1 In the next few questions, I will ask you about ALL your trips taken during the ENTIRE calendar year of 2001 to PRIMARILY hunt for [fill GAME] in [fill I_RESIDENT]. Sometimes you may take [fill TEMP1] [fill GAME] hunting trip where you are away from home one night or several nights. Other times, you may take [fill TEMP1] [fill GAME] hunting trip where you leave from and return to your home in one day. In total, how many trips did you take to hunt PRIMARILY for [fill GAME] during 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]? Think about what it costs you for a TYPICAL [fill GAME] hunting trip. Include your expenses for things such as gasoline and other transportation costs, food, and lodging. If you went hunting with family or friends, include ONLY YOUR SHARE of the cost. Keeping all those expenses in mind, how much did a TYPICAL hunting trip cost you during 2001 when you hunted PRIMARILY for [fill GAME] in [fill I_RESIDENT]? What is the most your [fill GAME] hunting in [fill I_RESIDENT] could have cost you per trip last year before you would NOT have gone [fill GAME] hunting at all in 2001, not even one trip, because it would have been too expensive? Keep in mind that the cost per trip of other kinds of hunting, fishing and recreational activities would not have changed. So, in other words, $[fill HUNTBID] would have been too much to pay for one [fill GAME] hunting trip last year in [fill I_RESIDENT]? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How much would have been too much to pay for one [fill GAME] hunting trip last year in [fill I_RESIDENT]? Wildlife-Watching Economic Evaluation In the next few questions, I will ask you about ALL your trips taken for the PRIMARY PURPOSE of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife during the ENTIRE calendar year of 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]. In your [fill TEMP1] you reported taking [fill ECONADD] [trip/trips] for the PRIMARY PURPOSE of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT]. Is that correct? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How many trips did you take for the PRIMARY PURPOSE of observing, feeding or photographing wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT] during 2001? In your [fill TEMP1], you reported that you spent on average $[fill NCUTOT] per trip during 2001 where your PRIMARY PURPOSE was to observe, photograph or feed wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT]. Would you say that cost is about right? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How much would you say was the average cost of your [fill TEMP1] [trip/ trips] during 2001 where your PRIMARY PURPOSE was to observe, photograph, or feed wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT]? If you went with family or friends, include ONLY YOUR SHARE of the cost. What is the most your trip(s) to observe, photograph, or feed wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT] could have cost you per trip last year before you would NOT have gone at all in 2001, not even one trip, because it would have been too expensive? Keep in mind that the cost per trip of other kinds of recreation would not have changed. So, in other words, $[fill ECONNCU] would have been too much to pay to take even one trip to observe, photograph, or feed wildlife in 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How much would have been too much to pay to take even 1 trip to feed, photograph, or observe wildlife in 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]? 18 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Appendix A. Contingent Valuation Questions from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation 1 The fishing economic evaluation questions were the same as the hunting questions. Note: All bracketed fill commands were provided by the computer for each interview. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 19 Table B-1. Deer Hunting Net Economic Value Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 377 15 347-406 331 29 274-387 Alabama 858* 292 287-1,429 499* 297 –83-1,081 Arizona 349* 111 131-567 … Arkansas 331 81 172-489 … Connecticut 529* 225 87-971 … Georgia 456* 107 246-666 … Illinois 456* 186 91-820 … Indiana 588* 192 211-965 … Iowa 210 60 94-327 … Kansas 307 111 90-524 … Kentucky 271 58 157-385 … Louisiana 449* 110 233-664 … Maine 420 81 262-579 289* 108 77-500 Maryland 392* 169 61-723 … Massachusetts 307* 67 176-438 … Michigan 433 95 246-619 … Minnesota 238 47 146-330 … Mississippi 400* 160 86-714 211* 49 116-306 Missouri 198 46 108-288 209* 53 105-314 Nebraska 475 99 281-669 … Nevada 321* 152 21-620 … New Hampshire 402 173 65-740 586* 265 65-1,106 New Mexico 389 183 29-749 … New York 485 104 282-688 282* 82 120-444 North Carolina 657* 170 323-991 … North Dakota 284 53 178-389 … Ohio 350 62 229-471 … Oklahoma 668 156 362-974 … Pennsylvania 247 50 151-344 343* 87 171-514 South Carolina 408 101 209-606 … South Dakota 309 60 192-426 … Tennessee 313* 124 68-557 140* 51 40-240 Texas 418 82 256-580 550* 258 46-1,055 Utah 220 29 162-277 … Vermont 258 53 155-362 92* 29 35-149 Virginia 675* 247 191-1,160 98* 60 –19-215 Washington 277 43 194-360 … West Virginia 295 55 186-403 501* 197 115-886 Wisconsin 335 45 245-424 379* 91 201-557 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample sizes for California, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, and Rhode Island were too small to report state resident values reliably. Appendix B. Annual Net Economic Values 20 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table B-2. Elk Hunting Net Economic Value Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 380 43 296-464 556 148 266-845 Colorado 252 64 127-377 604* 256 103-1,106 Idaho 347 100 150-544 … Montana 316 67 183-448 … Oregon 552 120 317-786 … Wyoming 414 138 144-684 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table B-3. Moose Hunting Net Economic Value Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Alaska 579* 126 331-826 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table B-4. Bass Fishing Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater���s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 370 21 329-410 257 29 201-313 Alabama 358 79 203-513 135* 62 14-257 Arkansas 638 202 241-1,034 400* 169 69-732 Delaware 287* 212 –129-703 … Florida 569 127 322-817 286* 93 104-468 Georgia 266 45 177-354 … Illinois 397 86 227-566 … Indiana 285 60 169-402 … Iowa 155 34 88-222 … Kansas 163 38 87-238 … Kentucky 432 125 187-677 413* 141 136-690 Louisiana 295 63 173-418 … Maryland 433 113 210-654 187* 80 30-343 Massachusetts 284 64 159-409 … Mississippi 248 57 137-360 … Missouri 449 94 264-634 184* 47 92-276 Nebraska 251 45 162-340 … North Carolina 279* 62 158-400 123* 63 –2-247 Oklahoma 347 79 193-501 … Rhode Island 271* 129 18-524 … South Carolina 488 123 246-729 … Tennessee 409 112 190-629 601* 244 122-1,079 Texas 397 123 155-638 286* 104 82-490 Virginia 214 46 123-305 174* 108 –37-386 West Virginia 205 51 105-305 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 21 Table B-5. Trout Fishing Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 300 14 272-328 325 33 259-390 Alaska 411 104 208-615 … Arizona 277 45 187-366 … California 287 51 186-387 260 77 109-411 Colorado 331 60 213-449 273 43 188-356 Connecticut 199 37 127-271 … Idaho 267 60 148-385 316 127 69-564 Maine 337 80 180-494 350* 90 173-527 Montana 282 53 177-386 677 203 279-1,074 Nevada 364 109 151-578 … New Hampshire 347 59 230-463 527* 226 83-970 New Jersey 401* 176 56-746 … New Mexico 301 88 128-474 … New York 286* 87 115-456 513* 271 –18-1,044 Oregon 216 39 140-293 134* 55 26-242 Pennsylvania 400 107 189-610 293* 111 76-511 Utah 232 27 179-284 225* 77 74-376 Vermont 250 66 122-379 … Washington 301 56 191-410 … Wyoming 351 50 255-448 210 55 103-318 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table B-6. Walleye Fishing Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 335 27 282-389 350 50 253-447 Michigan 200* 76 51-349 … Minnesota 427 66 299-556 350 67 221-481 North Dakota 237 33 172-302 155* 135 –110-420 Ohio 202 41 121-283 … South Dakota 324 63 200-448 235* 97 45-424 Wisconsin 375 92 195-556 409* 146 123-695 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. 22 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table B-7. Wildlife Watching Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 257 12 233-282 488 37 415-561 Alabama 242* 94 59-426 … Alaska 722 192 345-1,099 … Arizona 272 59 156-388 … Arkansas 192* 111 –26-409 … California 230 51 130-331 176* 59 62-292 Colorado 257 75 109-405 737* 209 327-1,147 Connecticut 252 112 34-471 … Delaware 73* 33 9-137 … Florida 313 99 119-507 808* 260 297-1,318 Georgia 389* 203 –10-787 … Hawaii 243*+ 135 –21-507 … Idaho 112 47 21-204 344* 245 –136-824 Illinois 93* 20 52-133 347* 140 74-621 Indiana 428 177 82-775 … Iowa 194 103 –6-395 … Kansas 289 152 –10-586 … Kentucky 214* 63 90-337 … Louisiana 268* 108 56-479 … Maine 282 88 111-454 610* 213 191-1,028 Maryland 362 94 178-546 722* 263 206-1,238 Massachusetts 208 63 85-332 227* 234 –233-686 Michigan 289* 81 130-447 … Minnesota 323* 147 33-612 … Missouri 131 57 20-243 … Montana 178 43 95-261 … Nebraska 198 55 89-306 … Nevada 381*+ 217 –45-807 … New Hampshire 178 51 78-278 470* 195 87-853 New Jersey 198 38 124-273 … New Mexico 328 85 161-494 … New York 305 73 164-447 173* 67 42-305 North Carolina 493*+ 302 ���99-1,085 529* 374 –205-1,262 North Dakota 190* 58 77-303 … Ohio 170 59 54-286 … Oklahoma 141* 60 23-259 … Oregon 267 52 164-370 630* 291 60-1,200 Pennsylvania 299 84 134-464 458* 263 –56-973 Rhode Island 237*+ 214 –182-656 … South Carolina 239* 67 110-370 … South Dakota 181* 89 7-355 … Tennessee 130* 39 55-206 629* 232 173-1,084 Texas 208* 68 74-342 … Utah 221 49 126-316 230* 91 51-409 Vermont 192 68 59-325 561* 257 57-1,065 Virginia 316* 81 159-474 510* 122 270-750 Washington 323 72 183-463 339* 82 177-501 West Virginia 278* 113 57-499 … Wisconsin 299 71 160-438 … Wyoming 184 58 71-297 259* 125 15-504 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample size for Mississippi was too small to report state resident values reliably. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 23 Table C-1. Sample Sizes for Deer Hunting State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alabama 29 11 Arizona 22 1 Arkansas 44 4 California 3 1 Connecticut 11 2 Delaware 8 0 Florida 8 2 Georgia 25 9 Illinois 12 6 Indiana 28 6 Iowa 44 3 Kansas 32 4 Kentucky 41 3 Louisiana 21 2 Maine 56 16 Maryland 21 4 Massachusetts 20 1 Michigan 51 6 Minnesota 55 8 Mississippi 19 13 Missouri 49 11 Nebraska 60 2 Nevada 14 2 New Hampshire 37 10 New Jersey 7 1 New Mexico 32 1 New York 39 16 North Carolina 21 4 North Dakota 106 2 Ohio 43 7 Oklahoma 39 2 Pennsylvania 67 29 Rhode Island 4 0 South Carolina 35 4 South Dakota 51 5 Tennessee 19 11 Texas 41 11 Utah 88 2 Vermont 48 10 Virginia 27 10 Washington 56 1 West Virginia 60 15 Wisconsin 90 11 Table C-2. Sample Sizes for Elk Hunting State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Colorado 34 18 Idaho 33 3 Montana 83 6 Oregon 53 2 Wyoming 37 4 Table C-3. Sample Sizes for Moose Hunting State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alaska 19 2 Table C-4. Sample Sizes for Bass Fishing State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alabama 76 15 Arkansas 46 12 Delaware 18 2 Florida 32 19 Georgia 40 6 Illinois 34 3 Indiana 52 8 Iowa 45 5 Kansas 61 6 Kentucky 56 13 Louisiana 39 8 Maryland 31 10 Massachusetts 37 5 Mississippi 53 6 Missouri 55 29 Nebraska 54 5 North Carolina 29 12 Oklahoma 60 6 Rhode Island 18 0 South Carolina 63 4 Tennessee 40 16 Texas 46 12 Virginia 41 10 West Virginia 30 4 Appendix C. Sample Sizes Table C-5. Sample Sizes for Trout Fishing State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alaska 73 3 Arizona 61 8 California 75 32 Colorado 130 61 Connecticut 41 1 Idaho 89 51 Maine 50 11 Montana 98 36 Nevada 44 3 New Hampshire 59 17 New Jersey 18 0 New Mexico 74 4 New York 20 19 Oregon 105 21 Pennsylvania 47 28 Utah 226 29 Vermont 37 7 Washington 132 5 Wyoming 98 48 Table C-6. Sample Sizes for Walleye Fishing State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Michigan 23 8 Minnesota 73 58 North Dakota 133 11 Ohio 41 6 South Dakota 78 18 Wisconsin 69 18 Table C-7. Sample Sizes for Wildlife Watching State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alabama 29 3 Alaska 43 3 Arizona 44 9 Arkansas 18 2 California 54 17 Colorado 49 14 Connecticut 37 4 Delaware 13 2 Florida 33 24 Georgia 11 3 Hawaii 14 4 Idaho 32 14 Illinois 24 10 Indiana 33 3 Iowa 28 1 Kansas 34 1 Kentucky 28 5 Louisiana 16 4 Maine 31 16 Maryland 41 14 Massachusetts 41 13 Michigan 23 7 Minnesota 15 4 Mississippi 4 1 Missouri 31 3 Montana 41 8 Nebraska 32 6 Nevada 22 3 New Hampshire 41 13 New Jersey 49 5 New Mexico 45 3 New York 35 19 North Carolina 19 10 North Dakota 20 1 Ohio 39 4 Oklahoma 25 3 Oregon 65 18 Pennsylvania 31 16 Rhode Island 21 2 South Carolina 24 0 South Dakota 23 7 Tennessee 23 10 Texas 14 5 Utah 62 14 Vermont 31 12 Virginia 25 16 Washington 91 21 West Virginia 17 1 Wisconsin 43 8 Wyoming 34 14 24 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Division of Federal Aid Washington, DC 20240 http://federalaid.fws.gov September 2003 Cover photo: Megan Durham, USFWS
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Title | Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Addendum to the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation Report 2001-3 |
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FWS Resource Links | http://wsfrprograms.fws.gov/subpages/nationalsurvey/National_Survey.htm |
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Date of Original | September 2003 |
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Transcript | U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Addendum to the 2001National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation Report 2001-3 Richard Aiken and Genevieve Pullis La Rouche Division of Federal Aid U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Washington, D.C. Division of Federal Aid U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Washington, D.C. 20240 Director, Steve Williams Chief, Division of Federal Aid, Kris La Montagne http://fa.r9.fws.gov/ This report is intended to complement the National and State reports from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. The conclusions are the authors and do not represent official positions of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Addendum to the 2001National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation Report 2001-3 September 2003 U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Abstract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 I. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 II. Measures of Economic Value . . . . . . . 4 III. Contingent Valuation . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 IV. Estimated Net Economic Values. . . . 6 V. Using the Value Estimates . . . . . . . . . 16 VI. Concluding Comments . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Appendix A. Contingent Valuation Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Appendix B. Annual Net Economic Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Appendix C. Sample Sizes . . . . . . . . . . . 23 This report presents state estimates of the net economic values for smallmouth and largemouth bass, trout and walleye fishing, deer, elk and moose hunting, and nonresidential wildlife watching. These values are based on contingent valuation questions from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation. Each state was classified as either a bass, trout or walleye state. Based on these classifications, anglers were asked to answer a contingent valuation question for their bass, trout, or walleye fishing during 2001. Likewise, each state was classified as either a deer, elk or moose state. Based on these classifications, hunters were asked contingent valuation questions for their 2001 hunts. People who took trips in 2001 to watch wildlife at least one mile from their residence were asked contingent valuation questions for these activities. The net economic values reported here are developed for current resource conditions. They are appropriate measures of economic value for use in cost-benefit analyses, damage assessments, and project evaluations. 2 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Contents Abstract David Hefferman, USFWS Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 3 The National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation (Survey hereafter) is a comprehensive source of data on people’s use of wildlife resources that has been collected on a national level since 1955 and on a state level since 1975. The first time the Survey collected net economic value data was in 1980. The effort was repeated, with some changes, in the 1985, 1991, 1996, and 2001 Surveys. This report presents estimates of net economic values for smallmouth and largemouth bass, trout and walleye fishing, deer, elk and moose hunting, and nonresidential wildlife watching. These values were derived from contingent valuation questions asked in the 2001 Survey. The report also compares the 2001 values with those of the 1980 and 1985 Surveys which used a similar contingent valuation methodology. Bass fishing refers to smallmouth and largemouth bass and excludes white bass, spotted bass, striped bass, striped bass hybrids, and rock bass. Trout fishing refers to all freshwater species commonly known as trout. Nonresidential wildlife watching refers to trips at least one mile from home taken for the primary purpose of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife (wildlife watching hereafter). The last five Surveys varied in the types of fishing and hunting asked for each state and in the methods and procedures used for contingent valuation. Regarding fishing, the 1980 Survey asked only trout fishing valuation questions for each state whereas the 1985 Survey asked only bass fishing valuation questions. The 1991 Survey assigned states as either primarily bass fishing or primarily trout fishing. A person who lived in a bass state was asked a bass fishing valuation question and was not asked a trout valuation question, and vice versa for a person who lived in a trout state. The 1996 and 2001 Surveys selected states in the upper Midwest as walleye states and the rest of the states as either trout fishing or bass fishing states. In 1980, all states were designated both deer and waterfowl states for valuation questions. In 1985, all states again were designated both deer and waterfowl states, and elk hunting valuation questions were asked for the northwestern and northern Rocky Mountain states. In 1991, all states were designated as deer hunting. In 1996 and 2001 selected states in the northwest and northern Rocky Mountains were designated as elk states, Alaska was designated as a moose state, and the remainder as deer states. Wildlife watching valuation questions were asked in 1985, 1991, 1996, and 2001. Respondents were asked about the trips they took for the primary purpose of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife. Another change in the Surveys deals with respondents’ state-assigned activity status. When a person answered a valuation question in the 1991 and earlier Surveys, their valuation response was assigned to their state of residence. Thus, a person from Michigan who hunted deer would have their deer valuation response assigned to Michigan even if they hunted deer in another state (e.g., mule deer in Utah). In the 1996 and 2001 Surveys, responses were assigned to the state where the activity occurred. Thus, with the example above, the response by a person from Michigan who hunted deer in Utah would be assigned to Utah. A third difference among the Surveys is the contingent valuation method itself. In 1980 and 1985, an open-ended approach was used, which essentially consisted of directly asking respondents how much was their total willingness to pay for a typical trip. In 1991 and 1996 a dichotomous choice method was used, in which the respondents were asked if they would have taken any trips if their total costs were some predetermined amount more than what they had actually paid. For the 2001 Survey, the open-ended approach was used again. Therefore comparison of 2001 values with 1980 and 1985 values is a more reliable comparison than with 1991 and 1996 values because the valuation questions were similar. The following section discusses the conceptual framework for net economic values of wildlife-related recreation, differentiating between net economic values and economic impacts. The third section describes the contingent valuation questions used in the Survey and steps that were taken in analyzing the data. The fourth section consists of value estimates for deer, elk and moose hunting, bass, trout and walleye fishing, and wildlife watching. This section also briefly compares the 2001 estimates with those from 1985 and 1980. The fifth section discusses how to use the value estimates presented, and the last section provides concluding comments. I. Introduction Carl Zitsman, USFWS In 2001 82 million Americans 16 years old and older fished, hunted, photographed, fed, and closely observed wildlife in the U.S. These wildlife enthusiasts spent $28.1 billion on trips to participate in these activities. Expenditures are a useful indicator of the importance of wildlife-related recreation to local, regional, and national economies. However, they do not measure the economic benefit to either the individual participant or, when aggregated, to society. Expenditures and net economic values are two widely used but distinctly different measures of the economic value of wildlife-related recreation. Net willingness to pay, or “consumer surplus”, is the accepted measure of the economic value of wildlife-related recreation to the individual recreationist and to society. It is the appropriate measure of economic value for a wide range of analyses that seek to quantify benefits and costs. Net economic value is measured as participants’ willingness to pay for wildlife-related recreation over and above what they actually spend to participate. The benefit to society is the summation of willingness to pay across all individuals. There is a direct relationship between expenditures and net economic value, as shown in Figure 1. A demand curve for a representative hunter is shown in the figure. An individual hunter’s demand curve gives the number of trips the hunter would take per year for each different cost per trip. The downward sloping demand curve represents marginal willingness to pay per trip and indicates that each additional trip is valued less by the hunter than the preceding trip. All other factors being equal, the lower the cost per trip (vertical axis) the more trips the hunter will take (horizontal axis). The cost of a hunting trip serves as an implicit price for hunting since a market price generally does not exist for this activity. At $60 per trip, the hunter would choose not to hunt, but if hunting trips were free, the hunter would take 16 hunting trips. At a cost per trip of $20 the hunter takes 10 trips, with a total willingness to pay of $375 (area acde in Figure 1). Total willingness to pay is the total value the hunter places on participation. The hunter will not take more than 10 trips because the cost per trip ($20) exceeds what he would pay for an additional trip. For each trip between zero and 10, however, the hunter would actually have been willing to pay more than $20 (the demand curve, showing marginal willingness to pay, lies above $20). The difference between what the hunter is willing to pay and what is actually paid is net economic value. In this simple example, therefore, net economic value is $175 (($55 – $20) × 10 ÷ 2) (triangle bcd in Figure 1) and hunter expenditures are $200 ($20 × 10) (rectangle abde in Figure 1). Thus, the hunter’s total willingness to pay is composed of net economic value and total expenditures. Net economic value is simply total willingness to pay minus expenditures. The relationship between net economic value and expenditures is the basis for asserting that net economic value is an appropriate measure of the benefit an individual derives from participation in an activity and that expenditures are not the appropriate benefit measure. Expenditures are out-of-pocket expenses on items a hunter purchases in order to hunt. The remaining value, net willingness to pay (net economic value), is the economic measure of an individual’s satisfaction after all costs of participation have been paid. Summing the net economic values of all individuals who participate in an activity derives the value to society. For our example let us assume that there are 100 hunters who hunt at a particular wildlife management area and all have demand curves identical to that of our typical hunter presented in Figure 1. The total value per year of this wildlife management area to society is $17,500 ($175 × 100). The example developed for hunting could have been developed in the context of fishing or wildlife watching. The basic concept of net economic value is the same for all three activities. 4 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 II. Measures of Economic Value Figure 1. Individual Hunter’s Demand Curve for Hunting Trips Cost per Trip ($) Trips per Year 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 5 10 15 20 b a e d c Expenditures Net Economic Value Respondents to the 2001 Survey who had gone deer, elk or moose hunting, bass, trout, or walleye fishing, or wildlife watching were asked a series of contingent valuation (CV) questions during their personal interview as a basis for determining their net willingness to pay for those activities. Questions were designed to find the respondent’s cost per trip in 2001, whether they would have continued to go had the cost been higher, and at what cost per trip they would not have gone at all in 2001 because it would have been too expensive (Appendix A presents the hunting and wildlife watching CV question series, as examples). Respondents first were asked to estimate the number of trips they had taken in 2001 to hunt or fish for the designated species. For wildlife watching the number of trips was obtained from an earlier section of the questionnaire. Respondents then were asked to consider expenses such as transportation, food and lodging, and to estimate what their cost had been in 2001 for a typical trip1. Then they were asked at what cost per trip they would not have gone at all because it was too expensive. The question stipulated that the cost of other kinds of recreational activities that could be considered substitutes would not have changed. In terms of Figure 1 the purpose of the question sequence is to have the respondent react as if he were moving up the demand curve, taking fewer trips as the cost per trip increased until he was priced out of the market at the cost per trip where the demand curve intersects the vertical axis. Assuming a linear demand curve, annual net economic value is then calculated using the difference between current cost ($20) and the maximum cost at the intercept ($55), and the number of trips taken in 2001 (10). Using the example in Figure 1, annual net economic value is ($55 – $20) × 10 2 = $175 = The average value per trip is that amount divided by the number of trips, or $175 ÷ 10 = $17.50 per trip The valuation sequence was posed in terms of number of trips and cost per trip because respondents were thought more likely to think of their wildlife-related recreation in terms of trips rather than days, the unit most commonly used in project evaluation. The economic values reported here are in terms of days to facilitate their use in analysis. The values are averages in two senses of the word. First, they are the arithmetic mean of the responses of all respondents in the sample, usually all those residing in a particular state who participated in the activity, e.g., all survey respondents who were Colorado residents and hunted elk in Colorado. Second, they are average values in that they are calculated for each respondent by dividing his total annual consumer surplus for an activity by the number of days he participated during 2001. Zero and negative net willingness-to-pay responses were deleted from the analysis, as were unreasonably high willingness-to- pay responses. Likely explanations of zero and negative willingness to pay are that the question was misunderstood by the respondent, incorrectly recorded by the interviewer, or that the response was a protest against higher costs rather than a legitimate bid, perhaps motivated by fear of an increase in the cost of a hunting or fishing license. To the extent that legitimate zero responses were among those deleted, the resulting values will be overestimates. Willingness to pay for wildlife-related recreation or, for that matter, anything a consumer buys, must be limited by some measure of an individual’s income and/or wealth. A person clearly is not able to pay some multiple of his household’s annual income for deer hunting, for example. In a less extreme situation, it is possible that a truly avid deer hunter would actually be willing to pay a significant portion of his income to continue hunting deer even though the costs of substitute activities such as small game hunting would be unchanged. Since the purpose of the analysis is to use the CV responses as representative of the typical recreationist in the group rather than calculating the sample’s aggregate net economic value, mitigating the effect of those extreme values on the sample mean is essential. Observations were dropped from the samples if the annual net economic value for an activity exceeded five percent of the individual’s household income. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 5 III. Contingent Valuation Jim Palmer, USFWS 1Wildlife watchers were given the dollar figure per trip which they had reported earlier in the interview. If the respondent did not think this was accurate he or she could change it. Tables 1 through 7 give state-by-state net economic values and standard errors for a day of deer, elk and moose hunting, bass, trout, and walleye fishing, and wildlife watching. There are several important things to know about the estimates. They are mean responses for net economic value per day based on the respondent’s state of activity. Each table gives the values of state residents and nonresidents. Because they are based on samples of recreationists, the values in the tables are estimates of the true population means and should be considered in relation to their standard errors and corresponding confidence intervals. The 95 percent confidence intervals are the estimated mean plus or minus roughly two times the standard error of the mean. Confidence intervals serve as indicators of the reliability of estimates. A 95 percent confidence interval means that the true value falls within that range in 95 out of 100 samples of the same size. An example of the use of the 95 percent confidence interval is the seemingly large difference in the mean value of a day of deer hunting by Texas residents ($76 per day) in comparison with that of Oklahoma residents ($56 per day). In reality the two values are not statistically different because their 95 percent confidence intervals overlap. Sample sizes and the degree of variation of responses within the samples are the primary reasons that some state confidence intervals are narrower than others. Sample sizes varied significantly across states. Values are not reported based on samples of less than ten observations. In all the tables, there is substantial variation in mean value from one state to the next even after deleting extreme responses. Confidence intervals can help in interpreting these apparent differences. For example, the 95 percent confidence interval of the Kansas state resident bass fishing per day mean ($13 to $29) and that of the mean in neighboring Oklahoma ($18 to $48) overlap. Thus, the two means ($20 for Kansas and $33 for Oklahoma) are not statistically different at that level of significance. However, the 95% confidence intervals for Kansas ($13 to $29) and Missouri ($30 to $76) do not overlap, so the difference in the means for Kansas ($20) and Missouri ($52) bass fishing net economic values can be interpreted as a true difference. 6 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 IV. Estimated Net Economic Values Eugene Hester, USFWS Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 7 Table 1. Deer Hunting Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 56 2 52-60 76 8 61-92 Alabama 110* 30 51-169 57* 41 –24-138 Arizona 67* 14 39-95 … Arkansas 36 7 22-50 … Connecticut 49* 25 0-98 … Georgia 30* 9 14-47 … Illinois 54* 22 9-98 … Indiana 54* 14 26-82 … Iowa 52 10 33-71 … Kansas 38 7 25-51 … Kentucky 53 15 23-83 … Louisiana 75* 29 18-132 … Maine 63 17 30-96 39* 9 21-56 Maryland 71* 28 14-127 … Massachusetts 48* 17 15-82 … Michigan 53 11 33-74 … Minnesota 46 10 26-65 … Mississippi 69* 41 –11-149 28* 10 10-47 Missouri 36 8 21-51 68* 17 34-101 Nebraska 92 24 44-139 … Nevada 73* 35 5-141 … New Hampshire 40 10 21-59 143* 74 –4-289 New Mexico 86 37 13-158 … New York 47 11 26-68 111* 45 23-200 North Carolina 58* 15 27-88 … North Dakota 47 5 36-58 … Ohio 79 18 43-114 … Oklahoma 56 19 21-92 … Pennsylvania 47 7 33-60 116* 29 58-174 South Carolina 35 9 19-52 … South Dakota 67 13 42-92 … Tennessee 33* 7 19-47 23* 7 10-36 Texas 76 16 46-107 122* 37 49-195 Utah 53 8 38-69 … Vermont 28 4 19-35 21* 8 5-37 Virginia 104* 42 21-186 60* 62 –61-181 Washington 54 11 33-75 … West Virginia 52 12 30-76 62* 26 11-113 Wisconsin 46 6 34-58 76* 56 –33-186 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample sizes for California, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, and Rhode Island were too small to report state resident values reliably. 8 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 2. Elk Hunting Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 84 15 55-113 120 32 57-182 Colorado 112 61 –9-232 110* 51 9-211 Idaho 60 17 26-94 … Montana 86 31 26-147 … Oregon 76 13 51-102 … Wyoming 61 13 36-86 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table 3. Moose Hunting Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Alaska 118* 28 61-174 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table 4. Bass Fishing Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 48 3 41-54 72 10 52-92 Alabama 31 8 15-47 63* 49 –32-158 Arkansas 61 15 33-90 49* 22 7-92 Delaware 30* 9 13-48 … Florida 67 20 28-106 53* 22 11-96 Georgia 55 19 19-91 … Illinois 52 19 17-88 … Indiana 36 7 22-49 … Iowa 34 9 16-52 … Kansas 20 4 13-29 … Kentucky 61 22 17-105 216* 104 11-420 Louisiana 43 15 14-72 … Maryland 87 44 2-173 42* 22 –2-85 Massachusetts 36 11 14-58 … Mississippi 29 7 16-42 … Missouri 52 12 30-76 48* 7 35-61 Nebraska 37 7 23-51 … North Carolina 52* 25 3-101 31* 11 10-53 Oklahoma 33 8 18-48 … Rhode Island 24* 7 11-38 … South Carolina 58 16 26-89 … Tennessee 53 18 18-88 55* 15 25-85 Texas 56 22 12-99 97* 52 –6-200 Virginia 25 5 14-36 56* 38 –18-130 West Virginia 25 6 14-37 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 9 Table 5. Trout Fishing Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 51 3 45-57 91 13 65-116 Alaska 85 32 22-148 … Arizona 52 10 33-71 … California 58 9 40-76 52 16 21-83 Colorado 53 13 28-79 56 9 40-73 Connecticut 33 11 12-55 … Idaho 60 19 24-97 162 87 –7-332 Maine 53 14 25-81 88* 41 7-169 Montana 31 5 20-41 184 61 64-304 Nevada 43 11 22-64 … New Hampshire 35 6 22-47 95* 37 23-168 New Jersey 56* 28 1-111 … New Mexico 68 26 15-119 … New York 38* 14 10-66 123* 44 36-209 Oregon 40 13 15-65 62* 18 27-97 Pennsylvania 61 25 12-110 81* 38 6-155 Utah 44 9 27-61 69* 14 41-97 Vermont 29 8 13-45 … Washington 44 8 29-60 … Wyoming 38 7 25-52 63 17 31-96 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table 6. Walleye Fishing Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 44 6 32-57 75 11 53-96 Michigan 26* 8 11-41 … Minnesota 48 11 27-69 70 11 48-92 North Dakota 37 12 13-61 26* 12 4-50 Ohio 45 9 26-63 … South Dakota 30 4 21-39 44* 16 13-75 Wisconsin 52 26 2-103 81* 26 31-131 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. 10 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 7. Wildlife Watching Net Economic Values Per Day: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Day Error Interval per Day Error Interval Aggregate 35 2 32-39 134 12 110-158 Alabama 31* 15 2-61 … Alaska 114 45 26-202 … Arizona 34 6 21-46 … Arkansas 20* 9 2-37 … California 39 8 24-54 64* 14 36-91 Colorado 33 7 20-46 290* 211 –122-703 Connecticut 18 4 11-27 … Delaware 10* 4 3-19 … Florida 41 19 4-77 192* 85 24-359 Georgia 51* 20 14-90 … Hawaii 29* 9 11-46 … Idaho 26 10 6-46 117* 84 –49-282 Illinois 11* 2 7-15 63* 26 12-114 Indiana 36 9 18-53 … Iowa 20* 6 8-32 … Kansas 35 16 4-66 … Kentucky 26* 13 –1-52 … Louisiana 38* 11 16-59 … Maine 35 16 4-67 139* 47 47-231 Maryland 66 18 30-101 116* 44 30-203 Massachusetts 21* 4 14-28 73* 33 8-137 Michigan 23* 7 8-37 ��� Minnesota 46* 33 –18-111 … Missouri 19 3 13-25 … Montana 18 4 11-25 … Nebraska 57 20 20-96 … Nevada 41* 16 9-73 … New Hampshire 27 7 14-40 151* 61 32-271 New Jersey 34 6 22-46 … New Mexico 42 8 27-57 … New York 52 20 11-92 75* 26 26-125 North Carolina 55* 28 –2-111 90* 41 9-171 North Dakota 33* 12 11-57 … Ohio 22 4 12-31 … Oklahoma 18* 3 13-24 … Oregon 34 7 22-47 120* 60 3-237 Pennsylvania 31 10 12-50 145* 55 37-252 Rhode Island 29* 16 –1-60 … South Carolina 29* 11 8-50 … South Dakota 22* 5 11-33 … Tennessee 19* 5 9-29 322* 143 42-602 Texas 34* 15 5-64 … Utah 27 6 16-39 96* 27 44-148 Vermont 38 21 –3-79 134* 85 –34-301 Virginia 55* 14 27-83 185* 61 64-305 Washington 50 8 33-66 78* 27 23-132 West Virginia 47* 35 –21-115 … Wisconsin 44 11 23-65 … Wyoming 31 10 13-50 54* 28 –1-109 ��� Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample size for Mississippi was too small to report the state resident value reliably. State Comparisons in Net Economic Values Over Time State-by-state comparisons of deer hunting, bass and trout fishing, and wildlife watching values for 1980, 1985, and 2001 show nearly all values to be similar. See the Summary Table at left for the few states that had significant differences (at the .05 level of significance) in values over time. The similar estimates from the 1980’s compared to 2001 show that these estimates are stable, making them reliable indicators of the value of wildlife-related recreation. It should be noted that the 1980 and 1985 values were for state residents participating anywhere in the U.S., while the 2001 values were for state residents participating in their state of residence. Given that for any given year most participation occurs within the resident state, this difference in methodology is not critical. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 11 Summary Table. States with Significant Differences in Net Economic Values Over Time (2001 dollars) 1980 1985 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Deer hunting Alabama 32 41 110 Bass fishing Arkansas 20 61 Florida 21 67 Indiana 18 36 Nebraska 17 37 South Carolina 21 52 Trout fishing Arizona 24 52 California 34 58 Maine 19 53 New Hampshire 15 35 Utah 24 44 Washington 24 44 Wildlife watching Delaware 41 10 Idaho 68 26 Illinois 31 11 Montana 31 18 Tennessee 56 19 Note: The 1980 Survey did not measure net economic values for bass fishing or wildlife watching and the 1985 Survey did not measure values for trout fishing. Of all the designated deer hunting states, only Alabama had a 2001 value that was significantly higher than those of 1980 and 1985 (Table 8). None of the 2001 numbers were significantly lower (at the .05 significance) than the 1980 and 1985 values. There are no value comparisons with the 1991 and 1996 Surveys because there were no values at the state level from the 1996 Survey, and the 1991 Survey used the dichotomous method, which is a significantly different approach to valuing wildlife-related recreation. All dollar values in this report are in 2001 dollars. 12 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 8. Deer Hunting 1980, 1985, and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 Dollars) Out-of-Stater’s State Resident Values Values 1980 1985 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alabama 32 41 110* 57*+ Arizona 52 64 67* … Arkansas 37 50 36 … California 54 69 … … Connecticut 39 51 49* … Delaware 43 41 … … Florida 34 89 … … Georgia 37 45 30* … Illinois 47 54 54* … Indiana 32 45 54* … Iowa 37 61 52 … Kansas 34 40 38 … Kentucky 45 53 53 … Louisiana 41 45 75* … Maine 30 40 63 39* Maryland 47 64 71* … Massachusetts 39 69 48* … Michigan 32 56 53 … Minnesota 43 51 46 … Mississippi 32 36 69*+ 28* Missouri 39 43 36 68* Nebraska 47 53 92 … Nevada 60 96 73* … New Hampshire 28 35 40 143* New Jersey 45 61 … … New Mexico 60 81 86 … New York 32 40 47 111* North Carolina 39 40 58* … North Dakota 49 46 47 … Ohio 43 46 79 … Oklahoma 43 56 56 … Pennsylvania 45 53 47 116* Rhode Island 41* 64* … … South Carolina 32 43 35 … South Dakota 49 43 67 … Tennessee 30 48 33* 23* Texas 56 64 76 122* Utah 43 68 53 … Vermont 30 35 28 21* Virginia 34 45 104* 60*+ Washington 37 46 54 … West Virginia 43 51 52 62* Wisconsin 34 53 46 76*+ … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. + 95% confidence interval includes zero. For the designated bass fishing states, 5 of 24 states had 2001 values that were significantly higher than 1985 values (Table 9). These states were Arkansas, Florida, Indiana, Nebraska, and South Carolina. There were no decreases in values for bass fishing by state. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 13 Table 9. Bass Fishing 1985 and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 dollars) State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values 1985 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alabama 21 31 63*+ Arkansas 20 61 49* Delaware 21 30* … Florida 21 67 53* Georgia 23 55 … Illinois 36 52 … Indiana 18 36 … Iowa 17 34 … Kansas 17* 20 … Kentucky 21 61 216* Louisiana 33 43 … Maryland 23 87 42* Massachusetts 15 36 … Mississippi 15 29 … Missouri 31 52 48* Nebraska 17 37 … North Carolina 21 52* 31* Oklahoma 18 33 … Rhode Island 21 24* … South Carolina 15 58 … Tennessee 18 53 55* Texas 31 56 97* Virginia 20 25 56*+ West Virginia 21 25 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. + 95% confidence interval includes zero. Six of 19 states with trout fishing values for 1980 and 2001 had 2001 values that were significantly higher than 1980 values (Table 10). These states were Arizona, California, Maine, New Hampshire, Utah, and Washington. There were no decreases from 1980 to 2001 in trout fishing values by state. 14 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table 10. Trout Fishing 1980 and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 dollars) State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values 1980 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alaska 60* 85 … Arizona 24 52 … California 34 58 52 Colorado 28 53 56 Connecticut 17 33 … Idaho 22 60 162 Maine 19 53 88* Montana 26 31 184 Nevada 24 43 … New Hampshire 15 35 95* New Jersey 22 56* … New Mexico 30 68 … New York 19 38* 123* Oregon 26 40 62* Pennsylvania 17 61 81* Utah 24 44 69* Vermont 15 29 … Washington 24 44 … Wyoming 32 38 63 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Five of 49 states with wildlife-watching values for 1985 and 2001 had 2001 values that were significantly lower than 1985 values (Table 11). These states were Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Montana, and Tennessee. In no state were there statistically significantly higher estimates in 2001 compared to 1985. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 15 Table 11. Wildlife Watching 1985 and 2001 Values Per Day (2001 Dollars) State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values 1985 2001 2001 Dollars/day Dollars/day Dollars/day Alabama 21 31* … Alaska 40 114 … Arizona 50 34 … Arkansas 20 20* … California 53 39 64* Colorado 43 33 290* Connecticut 31 18 … Delaware 41 10* … Florida 26 41 192* Georgia 43 51* … Hawaii 45 29* … Idaho 68 26 117* Illinois 31 11* 63* Indiana 46 36 … Iowa 21 20* … Kansas 23 35 … Kentucky 25 26* … Louisiana 17 38* … Maine 17 35 139* Maryland 40 66 116* Massachusetts 35 21 73* Michigan 33 23* … Minnesota 33 46*+ … Mississippi 20 … … Missouri 23 19 … Montana 31 18 … Nebraska 18 57 … Nevada 41 41* … New Hampshire 30 27 151* New Jersey 46 34 … New Mexico 48 42 … New York 26 52 75* North Carolina 23 55* 90* North Dakota 36 33* … Ohio 21 22 … Oklahoma 18 18* … Oregon 25 34 120* Pennsylvania 40 31 145* Rhode Island 35 29* … South Carolina 56 29* … South Dakota 21 22* … Tennessee 56 19* 322* Texas 40 34* … Utah 35 27 96* Vermont 30 38+ 134* Virginia 35 55* 185* Washington 33 50 78* West Virginia 28 47*+ … Wisconsin 25* 44 … Wyoming 38 31 54* … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. + 95% confidence interval includes zero. 16 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 When and how can these values be used? These numbers are appropriate for any project evaluation that seeks to quantify benefits and costs. They can be used to evaluate management actions that increase or decrease participation. Two types of willingness-to-pay values are available, net economic values per day per participant and net economic values per year of participation. Each of these values has a slightly different use and interpretation in conducting benefit and cost calculations of wildlife management and policy decisions. Mean net economic values per year per participant can be thought of as “all or nothing values.” Take trout fishing in Montana as an example, with a mean value of $282 (Table B-5 in Appendix B). The $282 represents the mean value to a resident trout angler in Montana given the current resource condition and trout fishing regulations. This is like the estimate of net economic value portrayed in Figure 1. If a wildlife refuge in Montana changes its policies and allows 100 more trout anglers to visit per year, the total value to society due to this policy change would be $28,200 ($282 × 100) per year (assuming all visitors are state residents). This value, however, assumes that these 100 anglers could and would fish for trout only at this refuge and that they would take a certain number of trips to this refuge. Thus, while mean net economic values per year per participant are interesting in terms of characterizing the current value of the resource and in calculating losses for a catastrophic change in the resource, they are not applicable for most management and public policy decisions faced by resource managers. Management and policy actions generally increase or decrease participation. Let us continue with the Montana example. Assume an environmental pollution accident results in the closure of a lake to fishing for a whole season. If a fishery manager knows the number of days of state resident fishing that occur on the lake over the whole season, 1,200 for example, it is possible to develop a rough estimate of the fishery losses from the accident. This estimate is accomplished by multiplying the net economic value per day ($31 from Table 5) by the days of participation, resulting in $37,200 ($31 × 1,200). If the refuge had data on the number of in-state and out-of-state visitors then the numbers could be adjusted to reflect their appropriate value. Two caveats exist to the examples above: (1) if recreationists can shift their activity to another location then the values are an overestimate; and (2) if a loss of wildlife habitat causes an overall degradation in the number of game, fish, or wildlife and in the quality of wildlife-related recreation then the values are an underestimate. The key issues that must be understood are: ■ Each of the different value estimates has slightly different interpretations and uses; ■ If an action changes participation, it is necessary to consider the extent to which participants substitute another site to fish, hunt, or wildlife watch. Failure to consider substitution will result in overestimation of resource losses; and ■ Using per participant value estimates to compute losses or benefits requires additional information, particularly on resource conditions and participation rates. Thus, the value estimates reported here must be used with caution in order to avoid misuse, which would result in incorrect estimates of aggregate costs or aggregate benefits. V. Using the Value Estimates USFWS Contingent valuation questions in the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation provide a nationwide data base for estimating net economic recreation values for selected wildlife-related recreation activities on a state-by-state basis. The data and the values they produce are important because they measure recreationists’ net willingness to pay for such activities, the conceptually correct measure of net economic value for a wide range of analyses and project evaluations. Because they are available for individual states, the values allow for differences in recreation values in various parts of the country. For many kinds of analysis, using values that reflect wildlife-related recreation in the state in question rather than some other state or a national average gives the analysis a better and more convincing empirical base. In this age of cost-benefit analysis these estimates can be used to justify the value of wildlife-related recreation. Be it deer hunting, trout fishing, or wildlife watching, the numbers prove that Americans benefit greatly from wildlife. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 17 VI. Concluding Comments Fred Deines, USFWS Hunting Economic Evaluation1 In the next few questions, I will ask you about ALL your trips taken during the ENTIRE calendar year of 2001 to PRIMARILY hunt for [fill GAME] in [fill I_RESIDENT]. Sometimes you may take [fill TEMP1] [fill GAME] hunting trip where you are away from home one night or several nights. Other times, you may take [fill TEMP1] [fill GAME] hunting trip where you leave from and return to your home in one day. In total, how many trips did you take to hunt PRIMARILY for [fill GAME] during 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]? Think about what it costs you for a TYPICAL [fill GAME] hunting trip. Include your expenses for things such as gasoline and other transportation costs, food, and lodging. If you went hunting with family or friends, include ONLY YOUR SHARE of the cost. Keeping all those expenses in mind, how much did a TYPICAL hunting trip cost you during 2001 when you hunted PRIMARILY for [fill GAME] in [fill I_RESIDENT]? What is the most your [fill GAME] hunting in [fill I_RESIDENT] could have cost you per trip last year before you would NOT have gone [fill GAME] hunting at all in 2001, not even one trip, because it would have been too expensive? Keep in mind that the cost per trip of other kinds of hunting, fishing and recreational activities would not have changed. So, in other words, $[fill HUNTBID] would have been too much to pay for one [fill GAME] hunting trip last year in [fill I_RESIDENT]? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How much would have been too much to pay for one [fill GAME] hunting trip last year in [fill I_RESIDENT]? Wildlife-Watching Economic Evaluation In the next few questions, I will ask you about ALL your trips taken for the PRIMARY PURPOSE of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife during the ENTIRE calendar year of 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]. In your [fill TEMP1] you reported taking [fill ECONADD] [trip/trips] for the PRIMARY PURPOSE of observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT]. Is that correct? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How many trips did you take for the PRIMARY PURPOSE of observing, feeding or photographing wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT] during 2001? In your [fill TEMP1], you reported that you spent on average $[fill NCUTOT] per trip during 2001 where your PRIMARY PURPOSE was to observe, photograph or feed wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT]. Would you say that cost is about right? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How much would you say was the average cost of your [fill TEMP1] [trip/ trips] during 2001 where your PRIMARY PURPOSE was to observe, photograph, or feed wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT]? If you went with family or friends, include ONLY YOUR SHARE of the cost. What is the most your trip(s) to observe, photograph, or feed wildlife in [fill I_RESIDENT] could have cost you per trip last year before you would NOT have gone at all in 2001, not even one trip, because it would have been too expensive? Keep in mind that the cost per trip of other kinds of recreation would not have changed. So, in other words, $[fill ECONNCU] would have been too much to pay to take even one trip to observe, photograph, or feed wildlife in 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]? (1) Yes (2) No [If No,] How much would have been too much to pay to take even 1 trip to feed, photograph, or observe wildlife in 2001 in [fill I_RESIDENT]? 18 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Appendix A. Contingent Valuation Questions from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation 1 The fishing economic evaluation questions were the same as the hunting questions. Note: All bracketed fill commands were provided by the computer for each interview. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 19 Table B-1. Deer Hunting Net Economic Value Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 377 15 347-406 331 29 274-387 Alabama 858* 292 287-1,429 499* 297 –83-1,081 Arizona 349* 111 131-567 … Arkansas 331 81 172-489 … Connecticut 529* 225 87-971 … Georgia 456* 107 246-666 … Illinois 456* 186 91-820 … Indiana 588* 192 211-965 … Iowa 210 60 94-327 … Kansas 307 111 90-524 … Kentucky 271 58 157-385 … Louisiana 449* 110 233-664 … Maine 420 81 262-579 289* 108 77-500 Maryland 392* 169 61-723 … Massachusetts 307* 67 176-438 … Michigan 433 95 246-619 … Minnesota 238 47 146-330 … Mississippi 400* 160 86-714 211* 49 116-306 Missouri 198 46 108-288 209* 53 105-314 Nebraska 475 99 281-669 … Nevada 321* 152 21-620 … New Hampshire 402 173 65-740 586* 265 65-1,106 New Mexico 389 183 29-749 … New York 485 104 282-688 282* 82 120-444 North Carolina 657* 170 323-991 … North Dakota 284 53 178-389 … Ohio 350 62 229-471 … Oklahoma 668 156 362-974 … Pennsylvania 247 50 151-344 343* 87 171-514 South Carolina 408 101 209-606 … South Dakota 309 60 192-426 … Tennessee 313* 124 68-557 140* 51 40-240 Texas 418 82 256-580 550* 258 46-1,055 Utah 220 29 162-277 … Vermont 258 53 155-362 92* 29 35-149 Virginia 675* 247 191-1,160 98* 60 –19-215 Washington 277 43 194-360 … West Virginia 295 55 186-403 501* 197 115-886 Wisconsin 335 45 245-424 379* 91 201-557 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample sizes for California, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, and Rhode Island were too small to report state resident values reliably. Appendix B. Annual Net Economic Values 20 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table B-2. Elk Hunting Net Economic Value Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 380 43 296-464 556 148 266-845 Colorado 252 64 127-377 604* 256 103-1,106 Idaho 347 100 150-544 … Montana 316 67 183-448 … Oregon 552 120 317-786 … Wyoming 414 138 144-684 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table B-3. Moose Hunting Net Economic Value Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Alaska 579* 126 331-826 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table B-4. Bass Fishing Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater���s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 370 21 329-410 257 29 201-313 Alabama 358 79 203-513 135* 62 14-257 Arkansas 638 202 241-1,034 400* 169 69-732 Delaware 287* 212 –129-703 … Florida 569 127 322-817 286* 93 104-468 Georgia 266 45 177-354 … Illinois 397 86 227-566 … Indiana 285 60 169-402 … Iowa 155 34 88-222 … Kansas 163 38 87-238 … Kentucky 432 125 187-677 413* 141 136-690 Louisiana 295 63 173-418 … Maryland 433 113 210-654 187* 80 30-343 Massachusetts 284 64 159-409 … Mississippi 248 57 137-360 … Missouri 449 94 264-634 184* 47 92-276 Nebraska 251 45 162-340 … North Carolina 279* 62 158-400 123* 63 –2-247 Oklahoma 347 79 193-501 … Rhode Island 271* 129 18-524 … South Carolina 488 123 246-729 … Tennessee 409 112 190-629 601* 244 122-1,079 Texas 397 123 155-638 286* 104 82-490 Virginia 214 46 123-305 174* 108 –37-386 West Virginia 205 51 105-305 … … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 21 Table B-5. Trout Fishing Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 300 14 272-328 325 33 259-390 Alaska 411 104 208-615 … Arizona 277 45 187-366 … California 287 51 186-387 260 77 109-411 Colorado 331 60 213-449 273 43 188-356 Connecticut 199 37 127-271 … Idaho 267 60 148-385 316 127 69-564 Maine 337 80 180-494 350* 90 173-527 Montana 282 53 177-386 677 203 279-1,074 Nevada 364 109 151-578 … New Hampshire 347 59 230-463 527* 226 83-970 New Jersey 401* 176 56-746 … New Mexico 301 88 128-474 … New York 286* 87 115-456 513* 271 –18-1,044 Oregon 216 39 140-293 134* 55 26-242 Pennsylvania 400 107 189-610 293* 111 76-511 Utah 232 27 179-284 225* 77 74-376 Vermont 250 66 122-379 … Washington 301 56 191-410 … Wyoming 351 50 255-448 210 55 103-318 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. Table B-6. Walleye Fishing Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 335 27 282-389 350 50 253-447 Michigan 200* 76 51-349 … Minnesota 427 66 299-556 350 67 221-481 North Dakota 237 33 172-302 155* 135 –110-420 Ohio 202 41 121-283 … South Dakota 324 63 200-448 235* 97 45-424 Wisconsin 375 92 195-556 409* 146 123-695 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Estimate based on a small sample size of 10-29. 22 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 Table B-7. Wildlife Watching Net Economic Values Per Year: 2001 State Resident Values Out-of-Stater’s Values Dollars Standard 95% Confidence Dollars Standard 95% Confidence per Year Error Interval per Year Error Interval Aggregate 257 12 233-282 488 37 415-561 Alabama 242* 94 59-426 … Alaska 722 192 345-1,099 … Arizona 272 59 156-388 … Arkansas 192* 111 –26-409 … California 230 51 130-331 176* 59 62-292 Colorado 257 75 109-405 737* 209 327-1,147 Connecticut 252 112 34-471 … Delaware 73* 33 9-137 … Florida 313 99 119-507 808* 260 297-1,318 Georgia 389* 203 –10-787 … Hawaii 243*+ 135 –21-507 … Idaho 112 47 21-204 344* 245 –136-824 Illinois 93* 20 52-133 347* 140 74-621 Indiana 428 177 82-775 … Iowa 194 103 –6-395 … Kansas 289 152 –10-586 … Kentucky 214* 63 90-337 … Louisiana 268* 108 56-479 … Maine 282 88 111-454 610* 213 191-1,028 Maryland 362 94 178-546 722* 263 206-1,238 Massachusetts 208 63 85-332 227* 234 –233-686 Michigan 289* 81 130-447 … Minnesota 323* 147 33-612 … Missouri 131 57 20-243 … Montana 178 43 95-261 … Nebraska 198 55 89-306 … Nevada 381*+ 217 –45-807 … New Hampshire 178 51 78-278 470* 195 87-853 New Jersey 198 38 124-273 … New Mexico 328 85 161-494 … New York 305 73 164-447 173* 67 42-305 North Carolina 493*+ 302 ���99-1,085 529* 374 –205-1,262 North Dakota 190* 58 77-303 … Ohio 170 59 54-286 … Oklahoma 141* 60 23-259 … Oregon 267 52 164-370 630* 291 60-1,200 Pennsylvania 299 84 134-464 458* 263 –56-973 Rhode Island 237*+ 214 –182-656 … South Carolina 239* 67 110-370 … South Dakota 181* 89 7-355 … Tennessee 130* 39 55-206 629* 232 173-1,084 Texas 208* 68 74-342 … Utah 221 49 126-316 230* 91 51-409 Vermont 192 68 59-325 561* 257 57-1,065 Virginia 316* 81 159-474 510* 122 270-750 Washington 323 72 183-463 339* 82 177-501 West Virginia 278* 113 57-499 … Wisconsin 299 71 160-438 … Wyoming 184 58 71-297 259* 125 15-504 … Sample size too small to report data reliably. * Sample size based on a small sample size of 10-29. Note: The sample size for Mississippi was too small to report state resident values reliably. Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 23 Table C-1. Sample Sizes for Deer Hunting State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alabama 29 11 Arizona 22 1 Arkansas 44 4 California 3 1 Connecticut 11 2 Delaware 8 0 Florida 8 2 Georgia 25 9 Illinois 12 6 Indiana 28 6 Iowa 44 3 Kansas 32 4 Kentucky 41 3 Louisiana 21 2 Maine 56 16 Maryland 21 4 Massachusetts 20 1 Michigan 51 6 Minnesota 55 8 Mississippi 19 13 Missouri 49 11 Nebraska 60 2 Nevada 14 2 New Hampshire 37 10 New Jersey 7 1 New Mexico 32 1 New York 39 16 North Carolina 21 4 North Dakota 106 2 Ohio 43 7 Oklahoma 39 2 Pennsylvania 67 29 Rhode Island 4 0 South Carolina 35 4 South Dakota 51 5 Tennessee 19 11 Texas 41 11 Utah 88 2 Vermont 48 10 Virginia 27 10 Washington 56 1 West Virginia 60 15 Wisconsin 90 11 Table C-2. Sample Sizes for Elk Hunting State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Colorado 34 18 Idaho 33 3 Montana 83 6 Oregon 53 2 Wyoming 37 4 Table C-3. Sample Sizes for Moose Hunting State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alaska 19 2 Table C-4. Sample Sizes for Bass Fishing State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alabama 76 15 Arkansas 46 12 Delaware 18 2 Florida 32 19 Georgia 40 6 Illinois 34 3 Indiana 52 8 Iowa 45 5 Kansas 61 6 Kentucky 56 13 Louisiana 39 8 Maryland 31 10 Massachusetts 37 5 Mississippi 53 6 Missouri 55 29 Nebraska 54 5 North Carolina 29 12 Oklahoma 60 6 Rhode Island 18 0 South Carolina 63 4 Tennessee 40 16 Texas 46 12 Virginia 41 10 West Virginia 30 4 Appendix C. Sample Sizes Table C-5. Sample Sizes for Trout Fishing State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alaska 73 3 Arizona 61 8 California 75 32 Colorado 130 61 Connecticut 41 1 Idaho 89 51 Maine 50 11 Montana 98 36 Nevada 44 3 New Hampshire 59 17 New Jersey 18 0 New Mexico 74 4 New York 20 19 Oregon 105 21 Pennsylvania 47 28 Utah 226 29 Vermont 37 7 Washington 132 5 Wyoming 98 48 Table C-6. Sample Sizes for Walleye Fishing State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Michigan 23 8 Minnesota 73 58 North Dakota 133 11 Ohio 41 6 South Dakota 78 18 Wisconsin 69 18 Table C-7. Sample Sizes for Wildlife Watching State Out-of- Residents Stater’s Alabama 29 3 Alaska 43 3 Arizona 44 9 Arkansas 18 2 California 54 17 Colorado 49 14 Connecticut 37 4 Delaware 13 2 Florida 33 24 Georgia 11 3 Hawaii 14 4 Idaho 32 14 Illinois 24 10 Indiana 33 3 Iowa 28 1 Kansas 34 1 Kentucky 28 5 Louisiana 16 4 Maine 31 16 Maryland 41 14 Massachusetts 41 13 Michigan 23 7 Minnesota 15 4 Mississippi 4 1 Missouri 31 3 Montana 41 8 Nebraska 32 6 Nevada 22 3 New Hampshire 41 13 New Jersey 49 5 New Mexico 45 3 New York 35 19 North Carolina 19 10 North Dakota 20 1 Ohio 39 4 Oklahoma 25 3 Oregon 65 18 Pennsylvania 31 16 Rhode Island 21 2 South Carolina 24 0 South Dakota 23 7 Tennessee 23 10 Texas 14 5 Utah 62 14 Vermont 31 12 Virginia 25 16 Washington 91 21 West Virginia 17 1 Wisconsin 43 8 Wyoming 34 14 24 Net Economic Values for Wildlife-Related Recreation in 2001 U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Division of Federal Aid Washington, DC 20240 http://federalaid.fws.gov September 2003 Cover photo: Megan Durham, USFWS |
Original Filename | nat_survey2001_economicvalues.pdf |
Date created | 2012-08-08 |
Date modified | 2013-05-17 |
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