Ecosystem models for fisheries management: finding the sweet spot

Author:

Collie Jeremy S1,Botsford Louis W2,Hastings Alan3,Kaplan Isaac C4,Largier John L5,Livingston Patricia A6,Plagányi Éva7,Rose Kenneth A8,Wells Brian K9,Werner Francisco E10

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Oceanography; University of Rhode Island; Narragansett RI 02882 USA

2. Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology; University of California Davis; Davis CA 95616 USA

3. Environmental Science and Policy; University of California; Davis CA 95616 USA

4. Conservation Biology Division; Northwest Fisheries Science Center; National Marine Fisheries Service; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; 2725 Montlake Blvd E. Seattle WA 98112 USA

5. Bodega Marine Laboratory; University of California Davis; Bodega Bay CA 94923 USA

6. NOAA Fisheries; Alaska Fisheries Science Center; 7600 Sand Point Way NE Seattle WA 98115 USA

7. CSIRO Wealth from Oceans Flagship; PO Box 2583 Brisbane Qld 4001 Australia

8. Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences; Louisiana State University; Baton Rouge LA 70803 USA

9. Fisheries Ecology Division; Southwest Fisheries Science Center; National Marine Fisheries Service; 110 Shaffer Road Santa Cruz CA 95060 USA

10. Southwest Fisheries Science Center; National Marine Fisheries Service; 8901 La Jolla Shores Drive La Jolla CA 92037 USA

Funder

GLOBEC

Bodega Bay

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

Reference150 articles.

1. Damped trophic cascades driven by fishing in model marine ecosystems;Andersen;Proceedings of the Royal Society B,2010

2. A multispecies extension of the Beverton and Holt theory of fishing, with accounts of phosphorus circulation and primary production;Andersen;Meddelelser fra Danmarks Fiskeri-og Havundersøgelser,1977

3. Aydin , K.Y. Gaichas , S.K. Ortiz , I. Friday , N. 2007 A comparison of the Bering Sea, Gulf of Alaska, and Aleutian Islands large marine ecosystems through food web modeling NOAA Technical Memorandum

4. Marine Ecosystems and Global Change

5. A critical size and period hypothesis to explain natural regulation of salmon abundance and the linkage to climate and climate change;Beamish;Progress in Oceanography,2001

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