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Featured researches published by Alex Tidd.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Fishing for space: fine-scale multi-sector maritime activities influence fisher location choice.

Alex Tidd; Paul Marchal; John K. Pinnegar; Julia L. Blanchard; E. J. Milner-Gulland

The European Union and other states are moving towards Ecosystem Based Fisheries Management to balance food production and security with wider ecosystem concerns. Fishing is only one of several sectors operating within the ocean environment, competing for renewable and non-renewable resources that overlap in a limited space. Other sectors include marine mining, energy generation, recreation, transport and conservation. Trade-offs of these competing sectors are already part of the process but attempts to detail how the seas are being utilised have been primarily based on compilations of data on human activity at large spatial scales. Advances including satellite and shipping automatic tracking enable investigation of factors influencing fishers’ choice of fishing grounds at spatial scales relevant to decision-making, including the presence or avoidance of activities by other sectors. We analyse the determinants of English and Welsh scallop-dredging fleet behaviour, including competing sectors, operating in the eastern English Channel. Results indicate aggregate mining activity, maritime traffic, increased fishing costs, and the English inshore 6 and French 12 nautical mile limits negatively impact fishers’ likelihood of fishing in otherwise suitable areas. Past success, net-benefits and fishing within the 12 NM predispose fishers to use areas. Systematic conservation planning has yet to be widely applied in marine systems, and the dynamics of spatial overlap of fishing with other activities have not been studied at scales relevant to fisher decision-making. This study demonstrates fisher decision-making is indeed affected by the real-time presence of other sectors in an area, and therefore trade-offs which need to be accounted for in marine planning. As marine resource extraction demands intensify, governments will need to take a more proactive approach to resolving these trade-offs, and studies such as this will be required as the evidential foundation for future seascape planning.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Predicting global tuna vulnerabilities with spatial, economic, biological and climatic considerations

Alex Tidd; Julia L. Blanchard; Laurence T. Kell; Reg Watson

Overfishing impacts the three pillars of sustainability: social, ecological and economic. Tuna represent a significant part of the global seafood market with an annual value exceeding USD


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2005

Do climate and fishing influence size-based indicators of Celtic Sea fish community structure?

Julia L. Blanchard; Nicholas K. Dulvy; Simon Jennings; Jim R. Ellis; John K. Pinnegar; Alex Tidd; Laurence T. Kell

42B and are vulnerable to overfishing. Our understanding of how social and economic drivers contribute to overexploitation is not well developed. We address this problem by integrating social, ecological and economic indicators to help predict changes in exploitation status, namely fishing mortality relative to the level that would support the maximum sustainable yield (F/FMSY). To do this we examined F/FMSY for 23 stocks exploited by more than 80 states across the world’s oceans. Low-HDI countries were most at risk of overexploitation of the tuna stocks we examined and increases in economic and social development were not always associated with improved stock status. In the short-term frozen price was a dominant predictor of F/FMSY providing a positive link between the market dynamics and the quantity of fish landed. Given the dependence on seafood in low-income regions, improved measures to safeguard against fisheries overexploitation in the face of global change and uncertainty are needed.


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2011

Exit and entry of fishing vessels: an evaluation of factors affecting investment decisions in the North Sea English beam trawl fleet

Alex Tidd; Trevor Hutton; Laurence T. Kell; Gurpreet Padda


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2008

Can economic and biological management objectives be achieved by the use of MSY-based reference points? A North Sea plaice (Pleuronectes platessa) and sole (Solea solea) case study

Graham M. Pilling; Laurence T. Kell; Trevor Hutton; P. J. Bromley; Alex Tidd; Loes J. Bolle


Fisheries Research | 2012

Dynamic prediction of effort reallocation in mixed fisheries

Alex Tidd; Trevor Hutton; Laurence T. Kell; Julia L. Blanchard


Fisheries Research | 2007

The potential for new Nephrops trawl designs to positively effect North Sea stocks of cod, haddock and whiting

T.L. Catchpole; Alex Tidd; Laurence T. Kell; A.S. Revill; G. Dunlin


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2011

An investigation of human vs. technology-induced variation in catchability for a selection of European fishing fleets

Stéphanie Mahévas; Trevor Hutton; Ane Iriondo; Angelique Jadaud; Christos D. Maravelias; Antonio Punzón; Jacques Sacchi; Alex Tidd; Efthymia V. Tsitsika; Paul Marchal; Nicolas Goascoz; Serge Mortreux; David Roos


Fish and Fisheries | 2017

Thirty years of fleet dynamics modelling using discrete-choice models: What have we learned?

Raphaël Girardin; Katell G. Hamon; John K. Pinnegar; Jan Jaap Poos; Olivier Thébaud; Alex Tidd; Paul Marchal


Fisheries Research | 2012

Managing mixed fisheries in the European Western Waters: Application of Fcube methodology

Ane Iriondo; Dorleta García; Marina Santurtún; José Castro; Iñaki Quincoces; Sigrid Lehuta; Stéphanie Mahévas; Paul Marchal; Alex Tidd; Clara Ulrich

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Trevor Hutton

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Katell G. Hamon

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Loes J. Bolle

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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