Xiurou Wu presented the forthcoming paper by Paul J. Ferraro and Pallavi Shukla on replicability crisis in Environmental and Resource Economics, followed by lab discussion ...
Xiurou Wu updated her research on the ecosystem service conflicts in China's Lake Poyang. Lake Poyang, China's largest freshwater lake, has provided ecosystem services in an uncoordinated fashion for centuries. Conflict among users has been shaped ...
François Castonguay presented his research on optimal allocation of treatment for COVID-19. As of May 13, 2020, there are 1,042 ongoing or completed studies to find a treatment against the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19). François classifies potential treatments in three categories...
Joakim Weill presented his research on the public management against COVID-19 in the United States. This work is a collaboration with Michael Springborn ...
Michael Springborn presented two of his published papers on use of compartmental models in the analysis of infectious disease policy with implications for modeling COVID-19. . .
Kiva Oken, Assistant Professor of the Department of Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology shared her research on management of marine fisheries. Diversification of fishing portfolios of individuals, vessels, and communities can stabilize interannual variability of income at each level of organization. This portfolio effect is stronger ...
Kaiwen Wang shared his research on regulations for trawl fisheries in China. Despite strong evidence of over-fishing, China’s fisheries have maintained a steady rate of growth for decades and become one of the largest producers in the world seafood market. On the other side, most of the marine ...
Jack Buckner presented his research on kelp forest restoration in California. Kelp forests large stands of macro-algae that grow in near shore temperate ecosystems around the world...
François Castonguay presented his research on ecological interventions. Ecological interventions that prevent and manage environmentally transmitted diseases are receiving increasing interest by both researchers and practitioners...