Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/25193
Title: Optimal bioeconomic management of changing marine resources
Authors: Moberg, Emily Alison
G. Neubert, Michael
Keywords: Joint Program in Oceanography
Biology
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Marine habitat conservation
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract: Marine populations are increasingly subjected to changing conditions whether through harvest or through broad-scale habitat change. Historically, few models have accounted for such trends over time, and even fewer have been used to study how trends affect optimal harvests. I developed and analyzed several models that explore, first, endogenous change caused by harvest and, second, exogenous change from factors (such as rising ocean temperatures) outside harvesters' control. In these models, I characterized the profit-or yield-maximizing strategy when harvesting damages habitat in a multispecies fishery, when harvest creates a selective pressure on dispersal, and when rising temperatures cause changes in vital rates. I explore this last case in both deterministic and stochastic environments, and also allow the harvester to learn about unknown parameters of the stock recruitment model while harvesting. I also develop an unambiguous definition of and describe a statistical test for a shift in a species' spatial distribution. My results demonstrate that optimal harvesting strategies in a changing environment differ in important ways from optimal strategies in a constant environment.
URI: https://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/25193
Appears in Collections:Technology

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