Mark Eiswerth

Faculty

Department Chair and Professor

Location Candelaria Hall 1281D
Address ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï, CB 101 Greeley, CO 80639
Office Hours MW: 2:25 pm – 3:55 pm, or by appointment in person or via Zoom.
Mark Eiswerth profile image

Education

PhD, University of Maryland, Economics

MA, University of Maryland, Economics

BA, The Colorado College, Economics

Professional Experience & Affiliations

  • Professor, ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï (2012 – Present).
  • Co-director, Environmental and Sustainability Studies Program, ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï (2016 – Present).
  • Associate Professor, ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï (2009 – 2012).
  • Associate Professor, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater (2003-2009); Director of the Fiscal and Economic Research Center (2007-2009); and University of Wisconsin Cooperative Extension State Specialist (2005-2009).
  • Mary and Leslie Gray Research Assistant Professor of the Economics of Public Lands, University of Nevada, Reno (2001-2003).
  • Research Assistant Professor and Cooperative Extension State Specialist, University of Nevada, Reno (1999-2001).
  • Senior Associate and Associate, Hagler Bailly, Inc., Boulder, CO (1991-1998).
  • Research Fellow and Postdoctoral Investigator, Marine Policy Center, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA (1988-1991).
  • Economist, Resources for the Future, Washington, DC (1987-1988).

Research Expertise & Interests

Environmental and Natural Resource Economics; Water Resource Economics; Economics of Invasive Species Management; Ecosystems, Biodiversity, and Habitat Management

Publications

Eiswerth, M.E., R. Epanchin-Niell, K. Rollins, M.H. Taylor. Economic Modeling and the Management of Exotic Annual Bromus Species: Accounting for Ecosystem Dynamics, Ecological Thresholds, and Spatial Interdependencies. Chapter 15 in: Exotic Brome-Grasses in Arid and Semi-arid Ecosystems of the Western U.S.: Causes, Consequences, and Management Implications. Edited by M.J. Germino, J.C. Chambers, and C.S. Brown. New York, NY: Springer Publishing (2016):  pp. 429-456.

Breffle, W., M.E. Eiswerth, D. Muralidharan, and J. Thornton. “Understanding How Income Influences Willingness to Pay for Joint Programs: A More Equitable Value Measure for the Less Wealthy.â€Â Ecological Economics 109 (2015): 17-25.

Skidmore, M., G. Anderson, and M. Eiswerth. “The Child Adoption Marketplace: Parental Preferences and Adoption Outcomes.â€Â Public Finance Review. Published online before print November 12, 2014, doi: 10.1177/1091142114547412 (2014): 1-34. Published in print Vol. 44, No. 2 (2016): 163-196.

Schoengold, K., P. Shrestha, and M. Eiswerth. “The Joint Impact of Drought Conditions and Media Coverage on the Colorado Rafting Industry.â€Â Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research 5:2-3 (2013): 183-198.

Eiswerth, M.E., S.T. Yen, and G.C. van Kooten. “Factors Determining Awareness and Knowledge of Aquatic Invasive Species.â€Â Ecological Economics 70 (2011): 1672-1679.

Eiswerth, M.E., and G.C. van Kooten. “Balancing Bio-energy Cropping Benefits and Water Quality Impacts: A Dynamic Optimization Approach.â€Â Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics 58 (4) (2010): 463-480.

Eiswerth, M.E., and G.C. van Kooten. “The Ghost of Extinction: Preservation Values and Minimum Viable Population in Wildlife Models.â€Â Ecological Economics 68(7) (2009): 2129-2136.

Eiswerth, M.E., K. Krauter, S.R. Swanson, and M. Zielinski. “Post-fire Seeding on Wyoming Big Sagebrush Ecological Sites: Regression Analyses of Seeded Nonnative and Native Species Densities.â€Â Journal of Environmental Management 90(2) (2009): 1320-1325.

Eiswerth, M.E., R. Kashian, and M. Skidmore. “Examining Angler Behavior Using Contingent Behavior Modeling: A Case Study of Water Quality Change at a Wisconsin Lake.â€Â Â Water Resources Research 44,W11426,doi:10.1029/2006WR005828 (2008).

Eiswerth, M.E., and G.C. van Kooten. “Dynamic Programming and Learning Models for Management of a Nonnative Species.â€Â Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics 55 (2007): 487-500.

Eagle, A.J., M.E. Eiswerth, W.S. Johnson, S.E. Schoenig, and G. C. van Kooten. “Costs and Losses Imposed on California Ranchers by Yellow Starthistle.â€Â Rangeland Ecology & Management 60(4) (2007): 369-377.

van Kooten, G.C., A.J. Eagle, and M.E. Eiswerth. “Determinants of Threatened Sage Grouse in Northeastern Nevada.â€Â Human Dimensions of Wildlife 12(1) (2007): 53-70.

Kashian, R., M.E. Eiswerth, and M. Skidmore. “Lake Rehabilitation and the Value of Shoreline Real Estate: Evidence from Delavan, Wisconsin.â€Â The Review of Regional Studies 36(2) (2006): 221-238.

Kim, C.S., R. Lubowski, J. Lewandrowski, and M.E. Eiswerth.  “Prevention or Control?: Optimal Government Policies for Invasive Species Management.â€Â Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 35/1 (2006): 29-40.

Eiswerth, M.E., and J.S. Shonkwiler. “Examining Post-wildfire Reseeding on Arid Rangeland: A Multivariate Tobit Modelling Approach.â€Â Ecological Modelling 192 (2006): 286-298.

Eiswerth, M.E., T.D. Darden, W.S. Johnson, J. Agapoff, and T.R. Harris.  “Input-output modeling, outdoor recreation, and the economic impacts of weeds.â€Â Weed Science 53(1) (2005): 130-137.

Yen, S.T., W.D. Shaw and M.E. Eiswerth. “Asthma Patients’ Activities and Air Pollution: A Semiparametric Censored Regression Analysis.” Review of Economics of the Household 2 (2004): 73-88.

Eiswerth, M.E., and G.C. van Kooten. “Uncertainty, Economics, and the Spread of an Invasive Plant Species.â€Â American Journal of Agricultural Economics 84(5), December, Proceedings (2002): 1317-1322.

Eiswerth, M.E., and W.S. Johnson. “Managing Nonindigenous Invasive Species: Insights from Dynamic Analysis.â€Â Environmental and Resource Economics 23 (2002): 319-342.

Eiswerth, M.E., and J.C. Haney. “Maximizing Conserved Biodiversity: Why Ecosystem Indicators and Thresholds Matter.â€Â Ecological Economics 38 (2001): 259-274.

Honors & Awards

2015/2016 College Scholar Award, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï

2013 First Year Scholars Outstanding Faculty Award, ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï

2010 First Year Scholars Outstanding Faculty Award, ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï