Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model

View more projects and reports generated by TPF-5(358), please visit http://tpf-5-358-wvc-study.org This report contains an update and an expansion of a cost-benefit model for wildlife-vehicle collisions and associated mitigation measures along highways, that was originally calculated in 2007 US$ an...

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Main Authors: Huijser, M.P., Duffield, J.W., Neher, C., Clevenger, A.P., McGuire, T.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Nevada Department of Transportation, Carson City, NV 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/17509
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spelling ftmontanastateu:oai:scholarworks.montana.edu:1/17509 2023-05-15T15:51:07+02:00 Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model Huijser, M.P. Duffield, J.W. Neher, C. Clevenger, A.P. McGuire, T. 2022-10 application/pdf https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/17509 en_US eng Nevada Department of Transportation, Carson City, NV Huijser MP, Duffield JW, Neher C, Clevenger AP, Mcguire T, editors. Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model. Transportation Pooled Fund Study, TPF-5(358). Nevada Department of Transportation, Carson City, NV. https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/17509 No restrictions. This document is available through the National Technical Information Service. Springfield, VA 22161 Technical Report 2022 ftmontanastateu 2023-04-08T22:40:43Z View more projects and reports generated by TPF-5(358), please visit http://tpf-5-358-wvc-study.org This report contains an update and an expansion of a cost-benefit model for wildlife-vehicle collisions and associated mitigation measures along highways, that was originally calculated in 2007 US$ and published in 2009. The direct cost values (vehicle repair, human injuries, human fatalities) were updated for deer, elk, and moose, and expanded by including additional species: gray wolf (Canis lupus), grizzly bear (Ursus arctos), and free ranging or feral domesticated species including cattle, horse, and burro. The costs associated with collisions were also expanded by including passive use, or nonuse values associated with the conservation value of selected wild animal species. The total costs (in 2020 US$) associated with a collision with deer, elk and moose were about 2-3 times (direct costs only) or about 3-4 times higher (direct costs and passive use values combined) compared to the values in 2007 US$. The passive use costs associated with threatened species (wolf, grizzly bear) were higher or much higher than the direct costs. The costs associated with mitigation measures (especially fences and wildlife crossing structures) were also updated and supplemented with new data. New cost-benefit analyses generated updated or entirely new threshold values for deer, elk, moose, and grizzly bear. If collisions with these large wild mammal species reach or surpass the threshold values, it is economically defensible to install the associated type and combination of mitigation measures, both based on direct use and passive use parameters and their associated values. The trend in increasing costs associated with vehicle repair costs, costs associated with human injuries and fatalities, and through including passive use values for wildlife is that we learn that the implementation of effective mitigation measures can be considered earlier and more readily than based on the cost-benefit model published in 2009. Nevada ... Report Canis lupus gray wolf Ursus arctos Montana State University (MSU): ScholarWorks
institution Open Polar
collection Montana State University (MSU): ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftmontanastateu
language English
description View more projects and reports generated by TPF-5(358), please visit http://tpf-5-358-wvc-study.org This report contains an update and an expansion of a cost-benefit model for wildlife-vehicle collisions and associated mitigation measures along highways, that was originally calculated in 2007 US$ and published in 2009. The direct cost values (vehicle repair, human injuries, human fatalities) were updated for deer, elk, and moose, and expanded by including additional species: gray wolf (Canis lupus), grizzly bear (Ursus arctos), and free ranging or feral domesticated species including cattle, horse, and burro. The costs associated with collisions were also expanded by including passive use, or nonuse values associated with the conservation value of selected wild animal species. The total costs (in 2020 US$) associated with a collision with deer, elk and moose were about 2-3 times (direct costs only) or about 3-4 times higher (direct costs and passive use values combined) compared to the values in 2007 US$. The passive use costs associated with threatened species (wolf, grizzly bear) were higher or much higher than the direct costs. The costs associated with mitigation measures (especially fences and wildlife crossing structures) were also updated and supplemented with new data. New cost-benefit analyses generated updated or entirely new threshold values for deer, elk, moose, and grizzly bear. If collisions with these large wild mammal species reach or surpass the threshold values, it is economically defensible to install the associated type and combination of mitigation measures, both based on direct use and passive use parameters and their associated values. The trend in increasing costs associated with vehicle repair costs, costs associated with human injuries and fatalities, and through including passive use values for wildlife is that we learn that the implementation of effective mitigation measures can be considered earlier and more readily than based on the cost-benefit model published in 2009. Nevada ...
format Report
author Huijser, M.P.
Duffield, J.W.
Neher, C.
Clevenger, A.P.
McGuire, T.
spellingShingle Huijser, M.P.
Duffield, J.W.
Neher, C.
Clevenger, A.P.
McGuire, T.
Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model
author_facet Huijser, M.P.
Duffield, J.W.
Neher, C.
Clevenger, A.P.
McGuire, T.
author_sort Huijser, M.P.
title Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model
title_short Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model
title_full Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model
title_fullStr Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model
title_full_unstemmed Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model
title_sort final report 2022: update and expansion of the wvc mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model
publisher Nevada Department of Transportation, Carson City, NV
publishDate 2022
url https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/17509
genre Canis lupus
gray wolf
Ursus arctos
genre_facet Canis lupus
gray wolf
Ursus arctos
op_relation Huijser MP, Duffield JW, Neher C, Clevenger AP, Mcguire T, editors. Final Report 2022: Update and expansion of the WVC mitigation measures and their cost-benefit model. Transportation Pooled Fund Study, TPF-5(358). Nevada Department of Transportation, Carson City, NV.
https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/17509
op_rights No restrictions. This document is available through the National Technical Information Service. Springfield, VA 22161
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