The Changing Nature of Fisheries Management and Implications for Science. Stringer, K., Clemens, M., & Rivard, D. In Beamish, RJ & Rothschild, B., editors, FUTURE OF FISHERIES SCIENCE IN NORTH AMERICA, volume 31, of Fish and Fisheries Series, pages 97+, PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS, 2009. Natl Marine Fisheries Serv; Dept Fisheries & Ocean Canada; AIFRB, SPRINGER. Conference on Future of Fishery Science in North America, Amer Inst Fishery Res Biol, CANADA, FEB 13-15, 2007
doi  abstract   bibtex   
The relationship between fisheries management and fisheries science has become more complex and more challenging over recent years as we move from a fish stock-focused approach to the management of fisheries with the ob objective of maximum sustainable yield, to an approach with Multiple objectives encompassing the precautionary approach, ecosystem-based management, and industry economic viability. At its core, the precautionary approach is about taking more cautious measures in the face of uncertainty. Linked to this is the growing recognition of the need to take oil ecosystem approach to fisheries management. file increasing lack of stability in ocean conditions and uncertainty around the effect g ocean conditions has enhanced the need to be more comprehensive in of our approach. All this serves to make fisheries management More complex than it was in the past. Whereas fisheries science advice in the past was focused largely on stock biomass and productivity, fisheries science is now being asked to provide advice, information, and analysis oil stock interactions and predation, oil spawning seasons and locations, oil sensitive areas of significance to the species, oil the effect of Various gear technologies on benthic communities, oil the effect of the increasing number of invasive species in the ecosystem, and oil changing ocean conditions and their potential effect on stock dynamics now and in the future. With Static funding resources over the past decade, scientists have struggled to find ways to respond to these new queries and to still provide basic stock status advice that continues to be and will continue to be the core scientific requirement for making , fisheries management decisions. This state of affairs has stretched the capacity of fisheries science to respond to the growing array of information requests that are now considered necessary to make responsible decisions. Indeed, the growing complexity and challenges for fisheries management, for fisheries science and for the fishing industry as a whole, has significantly stretched static resources but has been addressed by unique responses, depending on the circumstances, and the development of new partnerships and working arrangements between fisheries managers, scientists, and the fishing industry.
@inproceedings{ ISI:000265786100006,
Author = {Stringer, Kevin and Clemens, Marc and Rivard, Denis},
Editor = {{Beamish, RJ and Rothschild, BJ}},
Title = {{The Changing Nature of Fisheries Management and Implications for Science}},
Booktitle = {{FUTURE OF FISHERIES SCIENCE IN NORTH AMERICA}},
Series = {{Fish and Fisheries Series}},
Year = {{2009}},
Volume = {{31}},
Pages = {{97+}},
Note = {{Conference on Future of Fishery Science in North America, Amer Inst
   Fishery Res Biol, CANADA, FEB 13-15, 2007}},
Organization = {{Natl Marine Fisheries Serv; Dept Fisheries \& Ocean Canada; AIFRB}},
Abstract = {{The relationship between fisheries management and fisheries science has
   become more complex and more challenging over recent years as we move
   from a fish stock-focused approach to the management of fisheries with
   the ob objective of maximum sustainable yield, to an approach with
   Multiple objectives encompassing the precautionary approach,
   ecosystem-based management, and industry economic viability. At its
   core, the precautionary approach is about taking more cautious measures
   in the face of uncertainty. Linked to this is the growing recognition of
   the need to take oil ecosystem approach to fisheries management. file
   increasing lack of stability in ocean conditions and uncertainty around
   the effect g ocean conditions has enhanced the need to be more
   comprehensive in of our approach. All this serves to make fisheries
   management More complex than it was in the past. Whereas fisheries
   science advice in the past was focused largely on stock biomass and
   productivity, fisheries science is now being asked to provide advice,
   information, and analysis oil stock interactions and predation, oil
   spawning seasons and locations, oil sensitive areas of significance to
   the species, oil the effect of Various gear technologies on benthic
   communities, oil the effect of the increasing number of invasive species
   in the ecosystem, and oil changing ocean conditions and their potential
   effect on stock dynamics now and in the future. With Static funding
   resources over the past decade, scientists have struggled to find ways
   to respond to these new queries and to still provide basic stock status
   advice that continues to be and will continue to be the core scientific
   requirement for making , fisheries management decisions. This state of
   affairs has stretched the capacity of fisheries science to respond to
   the growing array of information requests that are now considered
   necessary to make responsible decisions. Indeed, the growing complexity
   and challenges for fisheries management, for fisheries science and for
   the fishing industry as a whole, has significantly stretched static
   resources but has been addressed by unique responses, depending on the
   circumstances, and the development of new partnerships and working
   arrangements between fisheries managers, scientists, and the fishing
   industry.}},
Publisher = {{SPRINGER}},
Address = {{PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS}},
Type = {{Proceedings Paper}},
Language = {{English}},
Affiliation = {{Stringer, K (Reprint Author), Govt Canada, Dept Fisheries \& Oceans, Fisheries \& Aquaculture Management, 200 Kent St, Ottawa, ON K1A 0E6, Canada.
   Stringer, Kevin; Clemens, Marc, Govt Canada, Dept Fisheries \& Oceans, Fisheries \& Aquaculture Management, 200 Kent St, Ottawa, ON K1A 0E6, Canada.
   Rivard, Denis, Govt Canada, Dept Fisheries \& Oceans, Ecosyst Sci Directorate, Ottawa, ON K1A 0E6, Canada.}},
DOI = {{10.1007/978-1-4020-9210-7\_6}},
ISSN = {{1367-8396}},
ISBN = {{978-1-4020-9209-1}},
Keywords = {{Ecosystem-based management; fisheries management; fisheries science;
   framework; policy; sustainability}},
Research-Areas = {{Fisheries}},
Web-of-Science-Categories  = {{Fisheries}},
Author-Email = {{Kevin.Stringer@NRCan.gc.ca
   marc.clemens@dfo-mpo.gc.ca
   rivardd@gmail.com}},
Number-of-Cited-References = {{19}},
Times-Cited = {{4}},
Usage-Count-Last-180-days = {{0}},
Usage-Count-Since-2013 = {{13}},
Journal-ISO = {{Fish Fisheries Series}},
Doc-Delivery-Number = {{BJH18}},
Unique-ID = {{ISI:000265786100006}},
OA = {{No}},
DA = {{2017-08-17}},
}

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