RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Spatial Bioinvasion Externalities with Heterogeneous Landowner Preferences JF Land Economics FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 10.3368/le.101.2.112024-0209 DO 10.3368/le.101.2.112024-0209 A1 Atallah, Shady S. YR 2024 UL http://le.uwpress.org/content/early/2024/12/12/le.101.2.112024-0209.abstract AB Preference heterogeneity among landowners managing transboundary resources can determine the production of externalities across their lands. We test this hypothesis in the context of an invasive species affecting two forest landowners where one values their property for recreation and the other produces timber. Using a spatially explicit first-mover repeated game, we find that the social cost of the externality is greatest when a bioinvasion starts on the recreation property. Except for species with fast long-distance dispersal, the optimal subsidy is nonuniform, targeting the landowner who acts as the weaker link, regardless of where a bioinvasion starts. Key words: bioeconomics; ecosystem services; externalities; forest health; invasive plants; spatial-dynamic modeling.