Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association (2012) 28, 225-236

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Yara A. Halasa, Donald S. Shepard, Eve Wittenberg, Dina M. Fonseca, Ary Farajollahi, Sean Healy, Randy Gaugler, Daniel Strickman and Gary G. Clark (2012)
Willingness-to-pay for an area-wide integrated pest management program to control the Asian tiger mosquito in New Jersey
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 28 (3), 225-236
Abstract: Using contingent valuation we estimated the perceived value of an area-wide integrated pest management program for the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, implemented in Monmouth and Mercer counties, NJ. We estimated residents' maximum willingness-to-pay and perceived monetary benefits (willingness-to-pay excluding residents who protested all types of payments) and payment modality through a telephone survey of 51 randomly selected households. The mean (± SE) perceived monetary benefits for an enhanced mosquito abatement program was $9.54 ± 2.90 per capita per year. Most respondents would have been willing to pay through taxes (35%) or charitable donations (6%) starting then, or through one of these approaches in the future (43%), whereas 16% were completely unwilling to pay any additional costs whatsoever. We projected that the perceived monetary benefits to the counties' 1.01 million residents for an enhanced mosquito control program would be $9.61 million annually. Thus, collectively residents perceived monetary benefits of 3.67 times the combined 2008 annual operating costs of the counties' existing mosquito control programs of $2.61 million.
(The abstract is excluded from the Creative Commons licence and has been copied with permission by the publisher.)
Link to article at publishers website
Database assignments for author(s): Dina M. Fonseca, Gary G. Clark, Ary Farajollahi

Research topic(s) for pests/diseases/weeds:
damage/losses/economics
control - general


Pest and/or beneficial records:

Beneficial Pest/Disease/Weed Crop/Product Country Quarant.


Aedes albopictus U.S.A. (NE)