Joseph W. Smith
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
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Featured researches published by Joseph W. Smith.
Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science | 2014
Brian J. Langseth; Kevin M. Purcell; J. Kevin Craig; Amy M. Schueller; Joseph W. Smith; Kyle W. Shertzer; Sean Creekmore; Kenneth A. Rose; Katja Fennel
Abstract Declines in dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations in aquatic environments can lead to conditions of hypoxia (DO ≤ 2 mg/L), which can directly and indirectly affect aquatic organisms. Direct effects include changes in growth and mortality; indirect effects include changes in distribution, movement, and interactions with other species. For mobile species, such as the pelagic filter-feeding Gulf Menhaden Brevoortia patronus, indirect effects are more prevalent than direct effects. The northern Gulf of Mexico experiences one of the largest areas of seasonal hypoxia in the world; this area overlaps spatially and temporally with the Gulf Menhaden commercial purse-seine fishery, which is among the largest fisheries by weight in the United States. Harvest records from the Gulf Menhaden fishery in 2006–2009 and fine-scale spatial and temporal predictions from a physical—biogeochemical model were used with spatially varying regression models to examine the effects of bottom DO concentration, spatial location, depth, week, and year on four response variables: probability of fishing, total Gulf Menhaden catch, total fishery effort, and CPUE. We found nearshore shifts in the probability of fishing as DO concentration declined, and we detected a general westward shift in all response variables. We also found increases in CPUE as DO concentration declined in the Louisiana Bight, an area that experiences chronic, severe hypoxia. The overall effects of environmental conditions on fishing response variables appeared to be moderate. Nevertheless, movement of either Gulf Menhaden or the purse-seine fishery in response to environmental conditions could potentially affect the susceptibility of Gulf Menhaden to harvest and could therefore influence assessment of the stock and associated stock status indicators.
North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2010
Dean W. Ahrenholz; Joseph W. Smith
Abstract The effects of hang-in percentage (degree of tautness) on the catch efficiency of gill nets for paralichthine flounders in North Carolina were examined using monofilament gill nets with 5.75-in stretched mesh. Nets with hang-in percentages of 33% and 60% were fished in pairs and were separated by a single monofilament gill net of 5.50-in stretched mesh. Catches of the paired test nets were significantly different, with the catches obtained by the looser nets (60% hang-in) exceeding the catches in the more tightly hung nets (33% hang-in) by 37% in number of fish and 46% in estimated weight. Length-frequency distributions of the catch were not significantly different between the paired nets with different hang-in percentages. Length-frequency distributions of legal-sized fish taken in 5.50- and 5.75-in stretched-mesh nets were significantly different, with the smaller mesh size resulting in a smaller (left-shifted) length-frequency distribution. Thus, hang-in percentage can be manipulated to alter ...
Fisheries Research | 2007
Douglas S. Vaughan; Kyle W. Shertzer; Joseph W. Smith
Archive | 1996
Douglas S. Vaughan; Joseph W. Smith; Michael H. Prager
Archive | 1988
Douglas S. Vaughan; Joseph W. Smith
Archive | 2002
Douglas S. Vaughan; Joseph W. Smith; Erik H. Williams
Archive | 2000
Joseph W. Smith; Dean W. Ahrenholz
Fisheries Research | 2016
Brian J. Langseth; Amy M. Schueller; Kyle W. Shertzer; J. Kevin Craig; Joseph W. Smith
Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science | 2014
Christopher M. Butler; Brian Hanrahan; Jeffrey A. Buckel; Paul J. Rudershausen; Francis Juanes; Joseph W. Smith
Archive | 1987
Joseph W. Smith; Eldon J. Levi; Douglas S. Vaughan; Ethel A. Hall