Quantitative modeling methods have become a central tool in the
management of harvested fish populations. This book examines how
these modeling methods work, why they sometimes fail, and how they
might be improved by incorporating larger ecological interactions.
"Fisheries Ecology and Management" provides a broad introduction to
the concepts and quantitative models needed to successfully manage
fisheries.
Walters and Martell develop models that account for key
ecological dynamics such as trophic interactions, food webs,
multi-species dynamics, risk-avoidance behavior, habitat selection
and density-dependence. They treat fisheries policy development as
a two-stage process, first identifying strategies for varying
harvest in relation to changes in abundance, then finding ways to
implement such strategies in terms of monitoring and regulatory
procedures. This book provides a general framework for developing
assessment models in terms of state-observation dynamics
hypotheses, and points out that most fisheries assessment failures
have been due to inappropriate observation model hypotheses rather
than faulty models for ecological dynamics.
Intended as a text in upper division and graduate classes on
fisheries assessment and management, this useful guide will also be
widely read by ecologists and fisheries scientists.
General
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