ThursdayFriday
April 29-30, 2004
102 Fishery Sciences
(auditorium)
Ray HilbornProfessor, University of Washington School of Aquatic & Fishery SciencesClosing Remarks: Learning from Experience? Profitability, Sustainability, and U.S. Fisheries |
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Ray Hilborn is the Richard C. and Lois M. Worthington Professor of Fisheries Management in the School of Aquatic & Fishery sciences, University of Washington. His general areas of research are fisheries population dynamics and management and natural resource conservation, and he has worked extensively on the fishery resources of the west coast of the US and Canada, and New Zealand and Australia. He currently serves on the scientific advisory panel for the Presidents Commission for Ocean Policy, the Editorial Board of the Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences and the Independent Advisory Panel for the Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna; he has worked with a number of other national and international fisheries management organizations. He is the co-author of 5 books and monographs on natural resource management, as well as 100 articles. His long-term areas of research have been explicit spatial modeling of populations, design of adaptive management systems for natural resources, the behavior and dynamics of fishing fleets, relating models to data using maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods, fisheries stock assessment and population viability analysis. He currently has major projects on salmon in Western Alaska, salmon and marine fishes on the west coast of the lower 48 states, and stock assessments and marine mammal interactions in New Zealand marine fisheries.
http://fish.washington.edu/people/rayh/
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