18 research outputs found
Marine Fisheries History: The 50th Anniversay Issue of the Marine Fisheries Review
The 1980's seems to have been the decade for conservation anniversaries. Celebrating centennials have been the
U.S. Fishery Bulletin (1981), NMFS Woods Hole Laboratory (1985), Journal of the Marine Biological Association (1987) and the Association itself (1984), Pacific halibut fishery (1988), Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass. (1988), and England's Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food (1989).
While the U. S. Department of Commerce turned 75 (1988), 50th anniversaries were nlarked by the NMFS Northwest and Alaska Fisheries Center (1981), The Wildlife Society and its
Journal ofWildlife Management (1987), National Wildlife Federation (1986), International Game Fish Association (1989), and, of course, the Marine Fisheries Review (1988), which provided the raison d'etre for this special issue being devoted to "Marine Fisheries History.
The History, Present Condition, and Future of the Molluscan Fisheries of North and Central America and Europe: Volume 3, Europe
(PDF file contains 248 pages.
The History, Present Condition, and Future of the Molluscan Fisheries of North and Central American and Europe: Volume 1, Atlantic and Gulf Coasts
This three-volume monograph represents the first major
attempt in over a century to provide, on regional bases, broad surveys of the history, present condition, and future of the important shellfisheries of North and Central America and Europe. It was about 100 years ago that Ernest Ingersoll wrote extensively about several molluscan fisheries of North America (1881, 1887) and about 100 years ago that Bashford Dean wrote comprehensively about methods of oyster culture in Europe (1893). Since those were published, several reports, books, and pamphlets have been written about the biology and management of individual species or groups ofclosely related mollusk species (Galtsoff, 1964; Korringa, 1976 a, b, c; Lutz, 1980; Manzi and Castagna, 1989; Shumway, 1991). However, nothing has been written during the past century that is comparable to
the approach used by Ingersoll in describing the molluscan
fisheries as they existed in his day in North America or, for that matter, in Europe. (PDF file contains 224 pages.
The History, Present Condition, and Future of the Molluscan Fisheries of North and Central America and Europe: Volume 2, Pacific Coast and Supplemental Topics
Over 100 molluscan species are landed in Mexico. About 30% are harvested on the Pacific coast and 70% on the Atlantic coast. Clams, scallops, and squid predominate on the
Pacific coast (abalone, limpets, and mussels are landed there exclusively). Conchs and oysters predominate on the Atlantic coast. In 1988, some 95,000 metric tons (t) of mollusks were landed, with a value of $33 million. Mollusks were used extensively in prehispanic Mexico as food, tools, and jewelry. Their use as food and jewelry continues. Except in the States of Baja California and Baja California Sur, where abalone, clams, and scallops provide fishermen with year-round employment, mollusk fishing is done part time. On both the Pacific and Atlantic coasts, many fishermen are nomads, harvesting mollusks wherever they
find abundant stocks. Upon finding such beds, they build camps, begin harvesting, and continue until the mollusks become so scarce that it no longer pays to continue. They then look for productive beds in other areas and rebuild their camps. Fishermen harvest abalones, mussels, scallops, and clams by free-diving and using scuba and hooka. Landings of clams and cockles have been growing, and 22,000 t were landed in 1988. Fishermen harvest intertidal clams by hand at wading depths, finding them with their feet. In waters up to 5 m, they harvest them by free-diving. In deeper water, they use scuba and hooka. Many species of
gastropods have commercial importance on both coasts. All species with a large detachable muscle are sold as scallops. On the Pacific coast, hatchery culture of oysters prevails. Oyster culture in Atlantic coast lagoons began in the 1950's, when beds were enhanced by spreading shells as cultch for spat. (PDF file contains 228 pages.
Beyond Kinetic Relations
We introduce the concept of kinetic equations representing a natural
extension of the more conventional notion of a kinetic relation. Algebraic
kinetic relations, widely used to model dynamics of dislocations, cracks and
phase boundaries, link the instantaneous value of the velocity of a defect with
an instantaneous value of the driving force. The new approach generalizes
kinetic relations by implying a relation between the velocity and the driving
force which is nonlocal in time. To make this relations explicit one needs to
integrate the system of kinetic equations. We illustrate the difference between
kinetic relation and kinetic equations by working out in full detail a
prototypical model of an overdamped defect in a one-dimensional discrete
lattice. We show that the minimal nonlocal kinetic description containing now
an internal time scale is furnished by a system of two ordinary differential
equations coupling the spatial location of defect with another internal
parameter that describes configuration of the core region.Comment: Revised version, 33 pages, 9 figure