3,146 research outputs found
Institutions and Contract Enforcement
We provide evidence on how two important types of institutions – dismissal barriers, and bonus pay – affect contract enforcement behavior in a market with incomplete contracts and repeated interactions. Dismissal barriers are shown to have a strong negative impact on worker performance, and market efficiency, by interfering with firms' use of firing threat as an incentive device. Dismissal barriers also distort the dynamics of worker effort levels over time, cause firms to rely more on the spot market for labor, and create a distribution of relationship lengths in the market that is more extreme, with more very short and more very long relationships. The introduction of a bonus pay option dramatically changes the market outcome. Firms are observed to substitute bonus pay for threat of firing as an incentive device, almost entirely offsetting the negative incentive and efficiency effects of dismissal barriers. Nevertheless, contract enforcement behavior remains fundamentally changed, because the option to pay bonuses causes firms to rely less on long-term relationships. Our results show that market outcomes are the result of a complex interplay between contract enforcement policies and the institutions in which they are embedded
Fact sheet: Influence of time since fire on pinyon-juniper woodland structure
Pinyon-juniper ecosystems presently occur on approximately 50 million acres across the semi-arid landscapes of the western United States
Production, losses, and germination of Ceanothus Fendleri seeds in an Arizona ponderosa pine forest
I quantified seed production and ovule losses for Ceanothus fendleri Gray (Fendler ceanothus) plants protected from large ungulate herbivores in a ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa [Laws]) forest of northern Arizona. I also tested seed germination responses to cold stratification and heat treatments in the laboratory. Fruit production on fecund stems ranged from 7.4 to 38.2 fruits per stem, which equated to 22.2118.2 potential seeds based on 3 ovules per fruit. Stems that produced fruit were significantly large relative to their expected sizes. Predispersal ovule losses ranged from 70.7(percent) to 91.4(percent) across the 2 years studied. A chalcidoid seed parasite (Eurytoma squamosa Bugbee) consumed 11(percent)28(percent) of the total number of seeds produced. Postdispersal seed predation varied from 0(percent) to 24(percent) and was significantly affected by forest floor substrate in 1 study year. Cumulative ovule losses were estimated to be 71(percent)92(percent). Cold stratification did not significantly affect seed germination, and exposure to 90C resulted in the highest germination percentage. Both dormant and nondormant seeds suggested a bet-hedging life history strategy. This study provides basic ecological information important for management of ponderosa pine forest and nursery production of C. fendleri
Fact sheet: Long-term herbivore exclusion for recovery of buckbrush populations during restoration of ponderosa pine forests in northern Arizona
Open conditions created by restoration activities in ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Laws.) forests of
the American Southwest can lead to increases in
understory plant productivity but also attract large
ungulate herbivores. New plant growth stimulated
by tree thinning and prescribed fire can provide
greater forage quantity and quality for herbivores,
but grazing pressure on the recovering understory
may be high. Some management options during the
period when understories are recovering include
excluding herbivores from the site or protecting
individual plants for a number of years following
restoration treatments. Short-term protection of
grazed species may provide opportunity for their
escape through development of mass or structural
defenses such as spines or thorns. For example,
Huffman and Moore (2003) showed that two years
after forest treatments buckbrush (Ceanothus
fendleri Gray) plants protected from mule deer and Rocky Mountain elk had greater stem number, longer stems, and greater current-year biomass than unprotected plants. In contrast, branches of unprotected plants were heavily browsed and just 8 percent of these plants produced flowers. Herbivory pressure also may be lessened with increasing plant community diversity and as more forage options become available to herbivores. However, it is unclear how long protection of grazed plants is needed. Chancellor et al. (2008) showed that buckbrush plants exposed to herbivores after seven years of protection had similar stem lengths and stem numbers as plants that continued to be protected. Leaf area and leaf biomass, however, were significantly less on the recently exposed plants than on protected plants.
In this study, we wanted to determine if long-term protection from herbivores was required to restore buckbrush abundance and potential reproduction after forest restoration treatments that were comprised of tree thinning and prescribed fire Buckbrush is a shrub common in ponderosa pine forests of the southwestern U.S. It is important for soil nutrient budgets, understory structure, and habitat for wildlife. We re-measured buckbrush plots (10.8 ft2 (1 m2) in size) in the following groups: 1) unprotected (never protected from herbivores); 2) short-term protection (exclosures installed in 1999, removed in 2006); and 3) long-term protection (exclosures installed in 1999 and maintained throughout the 12-year study period)
A seed chalcid (Eurytoma squamosa Bugbee) parasitizes buckbrush (Ceanothus fendleri Gray) seeds in a ponderosa pine forest of Arizona
Predispersal seed parasitism rates were quantified for buckbrush (Ceanothus fendleri Gray) in 3 Arizona ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Laws.) forest units that had been thinned for ecological restoration objectives. The chalcidoid wasp Eurytoma squamosa Bugbee (Eurytomidae) was responsible for 35(percent) of total seed loss in a single year. These findings represent an expansion of the known range and host list for E. squamosa and increase our understanding of factors that may constrain regeneration of C. fendleri in Southwest ponderosa pine forests
Fact sheet: Understory plant community responses to hazardous fuels reduction treatments in pinyon-juniper woodlands of Arizona, USA
Hazardous fuels reduction projects with the primary goal of reducing potential for uncontrollable wildfire are being implemented widely in dry forests of the western United States
Institutions and Contract Enforcement
We provide evidence on how two important types of institutions – dismissal barriers, and bonus pay – affect contract enforcement behavior in a market with incomplete contracts and repeated interactions. Dismissal barriers are shown to have a strong negative impact on worker performance, and market efficiency, by interfering with firms' use of firing threat as an incentive device. Dismissal barriers also distort the dynamics of worker effort levels over time, cause firms to rely more on the spot market for labor, and create a distribution of relationship lengths in the market that is more extreme, with more very short and more very long relationships. The introduction of a bonus pay option dramatically changes the market outcome. Firms are observed to substitute bonus pay for threat of firing as an incentive device, almost entirely offsetting the negative incentive and efficiency effects of dismissal barriers. Nevertheless, contract enforcement behavior remains fundamentally changed, because the option to pay bonuses causes firms to rely less on long-term relationships. Our results show that market outcomes are the result of a complex interplay between contract enforcement policies and the institutions in which they are embedded.employment protection, efficiency wages, bonus pay, incomplete contracts, firing costs, experiment
Institutions and Contract Enforcement
We provide evidence on how two important types of institutions – dismissal barriers, and bonus pay – affect contract enforcement behavior in a market with incomplete contracts and repeated interactions. Dismissal barriers are shown to have a strong negative impact on worker performance, and market efficiency, by interfering with firms' use of firing threat as an incentive device. Dismissal barriers also distort the dynamics of worker effort levels over time, cause firms to rely more on the spot market for labor, and create a distribution of relationship lengths in the market that is more extreme, with more very short and more very long relationships. The introduction of a bonus pay option dramatically changes the market outcome. Firms are observed to substitute bonus pay for threat of firing as an incentive device, almost entirely offsetting the negative incentive and efficiency effects of dismissal barriers. Nevertheless, contract enforcement behavior remains fundamentally changed, because the option to pay bonuses causes firms to rely less on long-term relationships. Our results show that market outcomes are the result of a complex interplay between contract enforcement policies and the institutions in which they are embedded.incomplete contracts; bonus pay; efficiency wages; employment protection; firing costs; experiment
Institutions and Contract Enforcement
We provide evidence on how two important types of institutions – dismissal barriers, and bonus pay - affect contract enforcement behavior in a market with incomplete contracts and repeated interactions. Dismissal barriers are shown to have a strong negative impact on worker performance, and market efficiency, by interfering with firms’ use of firing threat as an incentive device. Dismissal barriers also distort the dynamics of worker effort levels over time, cause firms to rely more on the spot market for labor, and create a distribution of relationship lengths in the market that is more extreme, with more very short and more very long relationships. The introduction of a bonus pay option dramatically changes the market outcome. Firms are observed to substitute bonus pay for threat of firing as an incentive device, almost entirely offsetting the negative incentive and efficiency effects of dismissal barriers. Nevertheless, contract enforcement behavior remains fundamentally changed, because the option to pay bonuses causes firms to rely less on long-term relationships. Our results show that market outcomes are the result of a complex interplay between contract enforcement policies and the institutions in which they are embedded.institutions, contracts, contract enforcement, market experiment
Dynamics of buckbrush populations under simulated forest restoration alternatives
Plant population models are valuable tools for assessing ecological tradeoffs between forest management approaches. In addition, these models can provide insight on plant life history patterns and processes important for persistence and recovery of populations in changing environments. In this study, we evaluated a set of ecological restoration alternatives for their long-term effects on buckbrush (Ceanothus fendleri Gray), a shrub common in understories of ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Laws. var. scopulorum Engelm.) forests of the southwestern United States. The field data were collected from a set of forest restoration units located on the Fort Valley Experimental Forest. We constructed simple stage-based models in order to simulate 25-year population dynamics. Results showed that scenarios that included overstory thinning, herbivore protection, and prescribed fire resulted in buckbrush populations with significantly greater numbers of aboveground stems than populations in the other alternatives. Vegetative stem recruitment, flowering, and seedling emergence were important in producing these results. For alternatives that included protection from herbivores, burning at 2-year frequencies resulted in populations with significantly greater numbers of aboveground stems than scenarios with longer intervals between burning. In contrast, frequent burning in alternatives without herbivore protection resulted in population decline. These results indicate that protecting buckbrush from large herbivores allowed plants to complete life cycles and fully express these life history traits. This research demonstrates that population modeling can help illuminate ecological tradeoffs associated with land management alternative
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