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Dive into the research topics where Joshua H. Goldstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua H. Goldstein.


Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2009

Modeling multiple ecosystem services, biodiversity conservation, commodity production, and tradeoffs at landscape scales

Erik Nelson; Guillermo Mendoza; James Regetz; Stephen Polasky; Heather Tallis; DRichard Cameron; Kai M. A. Chan; Gretchen C. Daily; Joshua H. Goldstein; Peter Kareiva; Eric Lonsdorf; Robin Naidoo; Taylor H. Ricketts; MRebecca Shaw

Nature provides a wide range of benefits to people. There is increasing consensus about the importance of incorporating these “ecosystem services” into resource management decisions, but quantifying the levels and values of these services has proven difficult. We use a spatially explicit modeling tool, Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and Tradeoffs (InVEST), to predict changes in ecosystem services, biodiversity conservation, and commodity production levels. We apply InVEST to stakeholder-defined scenarios of land-use/land-cover change in the Willamette Basin, Oregon. We found that scenarios that received high scores for a variety of ecosystem services also had high scores for biodiversity, suggesting there is little tradeoff between biodiversity conservation and ecosystem services. Scenarios involving more development had higher commodity production values, but lower levels of biodiversity conservation and ecosystem services. However, including payments for carbon sequestration alleviates this tradeoff. Quantifying ecosystem services in a spatially explicit manner, and analyzing tradeoffs between them, can help to make natural resource decisions more effective, efficient, and defensible.


Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2009

Ecosystem Services in Decision Making: Time to Deliver

Gretchen C. Daily; Stephen Polasky; Joshua H. Goldstein; Peter Kareiva; Harold A. Mooney; Liba Pejchar; Taylor H. Ricketts; James E. Salzman; Robert Shallenberger

Over the past decade, efforts to value and protect ecosystem services have been promoted by many as the last, best hope for making conservation mainstream – attractive and commonplace worldwide. In theory, if we can help individuals and institutions to recognize the value of nature, then this should greatly increase investments in conservation, while at the same time fostering human well-being. In practice, however, we have not yet developed the scientific basis, nor the policy and finance mechanisms, for incorporating natural capital into resource- and land-use decisions on a large scale. Here, we propose a conceptual framework and sketch out a strategic plan for delivering on the promise of ecosystem services, drawing on emerging examples from Hawai‘i. We describe key advances in the science and practice of accounting for natural capital in the decisions of individuals, communities, corporations, and governments.


Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2008

Should agricultural policies encourage land sparing or wildlife‐friendly farming?

Joern Fischer; Berry J. Brosi; Gretchen C. Daily; Paul R. Ehrlich; Rebecca L. Goldman; Joshua H. Goldstein; David B. Lindenmayer; Adrian D. Manning; Harold A. Mooney; Liba Pejchar; Jai Ranganathan; Heather Tallis

As the demands on agricultural lands to produce food, fuel, and fiber continue to expand, effective strategies are urgently needed to balance biodiversity conservation and agricultural production. “Land sparing” and “wildlife-friendly farming” have been proposed as seemingly opposing strategies to achieve this balance. In land sparing, homogeneous areas of farmland are managed to maximize yields, while separate reserves target biodiversity conservation. Wildlife-friendly farming, in contrast, integrates conservation and production within more heterogeneous landscapes. Different scientific traditions underpin the two approaches. Land sparing is associated with an island model of modified landscapes, where islands of nature are seen as separate from human activities. This simple dichotomy makes land sparing easily compatible with optimization methods that attempt to allocate land uses in the most efficient way. In contrast, wildlife-friendly farming emphasizes heterogeneity, resilience, and ecological inter...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Integrating ecosystem-service tradeoffs into land-use decisions

Joshua H. Goldstein; Giorgio Caldarone; Thomas Kaeo Duarte; Driss Ennaanay; Neil Hannahs; Guillermo Mendoza; Stephen Polasky; Stacie Wolny; Gretchen C. Daily

Recent high-profile efforts have called for integrating ecosystem-service values into important societal decisions, but there are few demonstrations of this approach in practice. We quantified ecosystem-service values to help the largest private landowner in Hawaii, Kamehameha Schools, design a land-use development plan that balances multiple private and public values on its North Shore land holdings (Island of O’ahu) of ∼10,600 ha. We used the InVEST software tool to evaluate the environmental and financial implications of seven planning scenarios encompassing contrasting land-use combinations including biofuel feedstocks, food crops, forestry, livestock, and residential development. All scenarios had positive financial return relative to the status quo of negative return. However, tradeoffs existed between carbon storage and water quality as well as between environmental improvement and financial return. Based on this analysis and community input, Kamehameha Schools is implementing a plan to support diversified agriculture and forestry. This plan generates a positive financial return (


PLOS ONE | 2014

Market forces and technological substitutes cause fluctuations in the value of bat pest-control services for cotton

Laura López-Hoffman; Ruscena Wiederholt; Chris Sansone; Kenneth J. Bagstad; Paul M. Cryan; James E. Diffendorfer; Joshua H. Goldstein; Kelsie LaSharr; John B. Loomis; Gary F. McCracken; Rodrigo A. Medellín; Amy L. Russell; Darius J. Semmens

10.9 million) and improved carbon storage (0.5% increase relative to status quo) with negative relative effects on water quality (15.4% increase in potential nitrogen export relative to status quo). The effects on water quality could be mitigated partially (reduced to a 4.9% increase in potential nitrogen export) by establishing vegetation buffers on agricultural fields. This plan contributes to policy goals for climate change mitigation, food security, and diversifying rural economic opportunities. More broadly, our approach illustrates how information can help guide local land-use decisions that involve tradeoffs between private and public interests.


Rangelands | 2010

Beef and Beyond: Paying for Ecosystem Services on Western US Rangelands

Joshua H. Goldstein; Carrie Presnall; Laura López-Hoffman; Gary P. Nabhan; Richard L. Knight; George B. Ruyle; Theodore P. Toombs

Critics of the market-based, ecosystem services approach to biodiversity conservation worry that volatile market conditions and technological substitutes will diminish the value of ecosystem services and obviate the “economic benefits” arguments for conservation. To explore the effects of market forces and substitutes on service values, we assessed how the value of the pest-control services provided by Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis mexicana) to cotton production in the southwestern U.S. has changed over time. We calculated service values each year from 1990 through 2008 by estimating the value of avoided crop damage and the reduced social and private costs of insecticide use in the presence of bats. Over this period, the ecosystem service value declined by 79% (


Human Dimensions of Wildlife | 2014

Replacement Cost Valuation of Northern Pintail (Anas acuta) Subsistence Harvest in Arctic and Sub-Arctic North America

Joshua H. Goldstein; Wayne E. Thogmartin; Kenneth J. Bagstad; James A. Dubovsky; Brady J. Mattsson; Darius J. Semmens; Laura López-Hoffman; James E. Diffendorfer

19.09 million U.S. dollars) due to the introduction and widespread adoption of Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) cotton transgenically modified to express its own pesticide, falling global cotton prices and the reduction in the number of hectares in the U.S. planted with cotton. Our results demonstrate that fluctuations in market conditions can cause temporal variation in ecosystem service values even when ecosystem function – in this case bat population numbers – is held constant. Evidence is accumulating, however, of the evolution of pest resistance to Bt cotton, suggesting that the value of bat pest-control services may increase again. This gives rise to an economic option value argument for conserving Mexican free-tailed bat populations. We anticipate that these results will spur discussion about the role of ecosystem services in biodiversity conservation in general, and bat conservation in particular.


International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystems Services & Management | 2016

A systematic review of approaches to quantify hydrologic ecosystem services to inform decision-making

Dylan Harrison-Atlas; David M. Theobald; Joshua H. Goldstein

Beef and Beyond: Paying for Ecosystem Services on Western US Rangelands DOI:10.2458/azu_rangelands_v33i5_goldstein


Alternatives: Global, Local, Political | 1975

World Energy Dynamics: 1969–1989

Joshua H. Goldstein

Migratory species provide economically beneficial ecosystem services to people throughout their range, yet often, information is lacking about the magnitude and spatial distribution of these benefits at regional scales. We conducted a case study for Northern Pintails (hereafter pintail) in which we quantified regional and sub-regional economic values of subsistence harvest to indigenous communities in Arctic and sub-Arctic North America. As a first step, we used the replacement cost method to quantify the cost of replacing pintail subsistence harvest with the most similar commercially available protein (chicken). For an estimated annual subsistence harvest of ˜15,000 pintail, our mean estimate of the total replacement cost was ˜


PLOS ONE | 2017

Spatial planning for a green economy: National-level hydrologic ecosystem services priority areas for Gabon

Joshua H. Goldstein; Heather Tallis; Aaron Cole; Steven R. Schill; Erik W. Martin; Michael Heiner; Marie-Claire Paiz; Allison Aldous; Colin Apse; Barry Nickel

63,000 yr−1 (

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Darius J. Semmens

United States Geological Survey

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Kenneth J. Bagstad

United States Geological Survey

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James E. Diffendorfer

United States Geological Survey

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Wayne E. Thogmartin

United States Geological Survey

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James A. Dubovsky

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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John B. Loomis

Colorado State University

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