Authors
Catherine M Dichmont, Sean Pascoe, Tom Kompas, Andre E Punt, R Deng
Publication date
2010/1/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
107
Issue
1
Pages
16-21
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Economists have long argued that a fishery that maximizes its economic potential usually will also satisfy its conservation objectives. Recently, maximum economic yield (MEY) has been identified as a primary management objective for Australian fisheries and is under consideration elsewhere. However, first attempts at estimating MEY as an actual management target for a real fishery (rather than a conceptual or theoretical exercise) have highlighted some substantial complexities generally unconsidered by fisheries economists. Here, we highlight some of the main issues encountered in our experience and their implications for estimating and transitioning to MEY. Using a bioeconomic model of an Australian fishery for which MEY is the management target, we note that unconstrained optimization may result in effort trajectories that would not be acceptable to industry or managers. Different assumptions regarding …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CM Dichmont, S Pascoe, T Kompas, AE Punt, R Deng - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010