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

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products arriving at Southeastern U.S. ports <strong>of</strong> entry. These trends are<br />

discussed in terms <strong>of</strong> volumes, seasonality, fresh versus frozen, product form,<br />

and country <strong>of</strong> origin. The major ports <strong>of</strong> entry are identified.<br />

Adams, Darius M., Richard W. Haynes, George F. Dutrow, Richard L.<br />

Barber, and Joseph M. Vasievich (1982). "Private Investment in<br />

Forest Management and the Long-Term Supply <strong>of</strong> Timber." American<br />

Journal <strong>of</strong> Agricultural Economics, 62(2):232-241.<br />

Timber supply behavior <strong>of</strong> private forest owners is a major uncertainty<br />

in long-term forest product market projections. A model <strong>of</strong> private supply is<br />

developed that explains both harvest and forest management investment<br />

decisions. Comparison <strong>of</strong> two fifty year projections, one assuming constant<br />

management intensity and a second using the harvest investment model,<br />

indicates that projected levels <strong>of</strong> investment would have little impact on<br />

markets prior to the year 2000, stabilize real wood product prices after 2000,<br />

eliminate s<strong>of</strong>twood lumber imports by 2030, and expand the dominant role <strong>of</strong><br />

southern forest regions in wood product markets.<br />

Adams, Douglas H., Michael E. Mitchell, and Glenn R. Parsons (1994).<br />

Seasonal Occurrence <strong>of</strong> the White Shark, Carcharodon carcharias, in<br />

Waters <strong>of</strong>f the Florida West Coast, with Notes on its Life History. <br />

Marine Fisheries Review, 56(4):24-28.<br />

The white shark, Carcharodon carcharias, is considered rare in the Gulf<br />

<strong>of</strong> Mexico; however, recent longline captures coupled with historical landings<br />

information suggest that the species occurs seasonally (winter-spring) within<br />

this region. We examined a total <strong>of</strong> seven adult and juvenile white sharks<br />

(185-472 cm total length) captured in waters <strong>of</strong>f the west coast <strong>of</strong> Florida.<br />

Commercial longline <strong>fisheries</strong> were monitored for white sharks during all<br />

months (1981-94), but this species was captured only from January to April.<br />

All white sharks were captured in continental shelf waters from 37 to 222 km<br />

<strong>of</strong>f the west coast <strong>of</strong> Florida when sea surface temperatures ranged from 18.7 o<br />

to 21.6 o C. Depths at capture locations ranged from 20 to 164 m. Fishing gear<br />

typically used in Gulf <strong>of</strong> Mexico <strong>of</strong>fshore <strong>fisheries</strong> may not be effective at<br />

capturing this species, and the apparent rarity <strong>of</strong> white sharks in this area<br />

may be, in part, a function <strong>of</strong> gear bias.<br />

Adasiak, A. (1979). "Alaska's Experience with Limited Entry." J. Fish.<br />

Res. Board Can., 36:770-782.<br />

The goals and structure <strong>of</strong> the limited entry program in Alaska were<br />

defined by the political, social, economic, and biological climates in which<br />

the program was implemented. This paper outlines how these considerations<br />

formed the program and discusses the impacts <strong>of</strong> the program and the problems<br />

involved in its implementation. Other possible modes <strong>of</strong> approaching entry<br />

limitation are discussed in relation to the possibility <strong>of</strong> limiting some<br />

currently unlimited <strong>fisheries</strong>.<br />

Addelman, Sidney (1962). "Orthogonal Main-Effect Plans for Asymmetrical<br />

Factorial Experiments." Technometrics, 4(1):21-46.<br />

Plans for asymmetrical factorial experiments that permit uncorrelated<br />

estimates <strong>of</strong> all main effects when the interactions are negligible are<br />

described. The construction <strong>of</strong> these plans is based upon the principle <strong>of</strong><br />

proportional frequencies <strong>of</strong> the factor levels. The possibilities <strong>of</strong> blocking<br />

these main effect plans, the randomization procedure and the method <strong>of</strong><br />

analysis are presented.<br />

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