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annotated bibliography of fisheries economics literature - Office of ...

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13 and 24, Sea Grant College Program, Texas A&M University.<br />

A summary <strong>of</strong> the <strong>fisheries</strong> management problem in the southeastern<br />

region. Problems related to habitat, allocation between user groups, bycatch,<br />

individual transferable quotas, etc. are discussed and placed in a broader<br />

context.<br />

Kemmerer, Andrew J. (1996). Letter to the Gulf <strong>of</strong> Mexico Fishery<br />

Management Council, Southeast Regional <strong>Office</strong>, National Marine<br />

Fisheries Service, St. Petersburg, FL, November, 9 pp.<br />

Comments based on a review <strong>of</strong> Amendment 9 to the Fishery Management Plan<br />

for the Shrimp Fishery <strong>of</strong> the Gulf <strong>of</strong> Mexico, Regulatory Impact Review, Draft<br />

Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement, and Social Impact Analysis<br />

(9/20/96).<br />

Kemmerer, Andrew J. (1996). Briefing for Upcoming Gulf <strong>of</strong> Mexico<br />

Fishery Management Council Meeting (November 11-14, 1996) in Point<br />

Clear, Al. Memorandum for Rolland Schmitten, Southeast Regional<br />

<strong>Office</strong>, National Marine Fisheries Service, St. Petersburg, FL,<br />

November, 3 pp.<br />

Briefing memorandum for the Gulf <strong>of</strong> Mexico Fishery Management Council<br />

meeting in Pt. Clear, Alabama covering shrimp amendment 9 (bycatch reduction),<br />

reef fish, and stone crab.<br />

Kenchington, T.J. and A.T. Charles (1989). A Definition <strong>of</strong> Fishing<br />

Capacity. Submitted to the Canadian Journal <strong>of</strong> Fisheries and Aquatic<br />

Sciences, 46:XXX-XXX.<br />

We identify both the importance <strong>of</strong> fishing capacity to modern <strong>fisheries</strong><br />

management and the lack <strong>of</strong> a definition <strong>of</strong> this parameter. A review <strong>of</strong> the<br />

concepts <strong>of</strong> capacity in the <strong>fisheries</strong> <strong>literature</strong> is used to elucidate the<br />

properties that the missing definition should have. Fishing capacity is then<br />

defined in terms <strong>of</strong> the fishing mortality that a boat or a fleet could exert<br />

under specified conditions. Capacity thus defined is contrasted with fishing<br />

effort, fishing power, and capital investment in the fishery. The remaining<br />

problems with this definition <strong>of</strong> capacity are examined and it is suggested<br />

that these are inevitable consequences <strong>of</strong> attempting to measure fishing<br />

capacity, regardless <strong>of</strong> the definition chosen.<br />

Kennedy, F.S., J.J. Crane, R.A. Schlieder, and D.G. Barber (1977).<br />

"Studies <strong>of</strong> the Rock Shrimp, Sicyonia Brevirostris, A New Fishery<br />

Resource on Florida's Atlantic Shelf." Florida Marine Research<br />

Publications, Florida Department <strong>of</strong> Natural Resources, Marine<br />

Research Laboratory, Number 27, June, 69 pp.<br />

Life history, fishery dynamics, and potential stock locations <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Florida east coast continental shelf population <strong>of</strong> rock shrimp were studied<br />

over a two year period.<br />

Kennedy, John O.S. (1987). "A Computable Game Theoretic Approach to<br />

Modeling Competitive Fishing." Marine Resource Economics, 4(1):1-<br />

14.<br />

A fishery is considered in which the young are harvested by one nation<br />

and the adults by another. The harvests are sold on separate markets.<br />

Finding the optimal strategies <strong>of</strong> the two nations is treated as a problem in<br />

dynamic noncooperative game theory. While in most other models players make<br />

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