22 results on '"Robert M. Muth"'
Search Results
2. Community Stability as Social Structure: The Role of Subsistence Uses of Natural Resources in Southeast Alaska
- Author
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Robert M. Muth
- Subjects
Structure (mathematical logic) ,Geography ,Natural resource economics ,Subsistence agriculture ,Natural resource - Published
- 2019
3. Fish biodiversity sampling in stream ecosystems: a process for evaluating the appropriate types and amount of gear
- Author
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Sarah P. Wells, Martha E. Mather, Robert M. Muth, and Joseph M. Smith
- Subjects
Ecology ,biology ,Aquatic ecosystem ,Biodiversity ,Sampling (statistics) ,Replicate ,Aquatic Science ,Minnow ,Fishery ,Habitat ,Electrofishing ,biology.animal ,Environmental science ,Ecosystem ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Because human impacts and climate change threaten aquatic ecosystems, a need exists to quantify catchment-scale biodiversity patterns and identify conservation actions that can mitigate adverse human impacts on aquatic biota. Whereas many traditional aquatic resource questions can be answered by repeatedly sampling a few target species with limited types of gear in the same habitats, sampling fish biodiversity patterns at larger scales requires a different approach. Researchers and managers need to determine the types of sampling gear and amount of effort that provide a representative estimate of biodiversity in a range of habitats across a catchment. Using a randomized block design within a 90-m stream reach that contained the same habitats as the scientific study area, fish assemblages were compared using three different types of gear (minnow traps, backpack electrofishing, and hoop nets) at three levels of effort (one, two, and three mixed-gear units) over four replicate days. A mixture of gear types best quantified fish assemblages. A combination of 10 minnow traps, 20-m of backpack electrofishing, and two hoop nets caught the most species. Additional gear added few new species. Resampling confirmed these results. When researchers and managers initiate sampling on a new stream or river system, they do not know how effective each gear type is and whether their sampling effort is adequate. Although the types and amount of gear may be different for other studies, systems, and research questions, the five-step process described here for making sampling decisions and evaluating sampling efficiency can be applied widely to any system to restore, manage, and conserve aquatic ecosystems. It is believed that incorporating this gear-evaluation process into a wide variety of studies and ecosystems will increase rigour within and across aquatic biodiversity studies. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Published
- 2013
4. Assessing Freshwater Habitat of Adult Anadromous Alewives Using Multiple Approaches
- Author
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Robert M. Muth, Martha E. Mather, Roxann D. Cormier, Joseph M. Smith, Holly J. Frank, and John T. Finn
- Subjects
Fish migration ,biology ,Ecology ,Alosa pseudoharengus ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Radio tracking ,Geography ,Habitat ,Disturbance (ecology) ,Ecosystem ,Watershed restoration ,Transect ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
After centuries of disturbance, environmental professionals now recognize the need to restore coastal watersheds for native fish and protect the larger ecosystems on which fish and other aquatic biota depend. Anadromous fish species are an important component of coastal ecosystems that are often adversely affected by human activities. Restoring native anadromous fish species is a common focus of both fish and coastal watershed restoration. Yet restoration efforts have met with uneven success, often due to lack of knowledge about habitat availability and use. Using habitat surveys and radio tracking of adult anadromous alewives Alosa pseudoharengus during their spring spawning migration, we illustrate a method for quantifying habitat using multiple approaches and for relating mobile fish distribution to habitat. In the Ipswich River, Massachusetts, measuring habitat units and physical conditions at transects (width, depth, and velocity) provided an ecological basis for the interpretation of landsc...
- Published
- 2012
5. Diversity in destinations, routes and timing of small adult and sub-adult striped bass Morone saxatilis on their southward autumn migration
- Author
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Tom Savoy, Martha E. Mather, Dewayne A. Fox, Sarah M. Pautzke, Linda A. Deegan, John T. Finn, Robert M. Muth, and Harold M. Brundage
- Subjects
Male ,geography ,food.ingredient ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Morone saxatilis ,Estuary ,Aquatic Science ,Destinations ,Biology ,Perciformes ,Fishery ,Bass (fish) ,food ,Massachusetts ,Homogeneous group ,Animals ,Animal Migration ,Female ,Seasons ,Long island sound ,Atlantic Ocean ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Overwintering - Abstract
Almost three-quarters of the 46 young adult and sub-adult striped bass Morone saxatilis that were acoustically tagged in Plum Island Estuary, Massachusetts, U.S.A., in the summer of 2006 were detected in one or more southern coastal arrays during their autumn migration. On the basis of the trajectories along which these M. saxatilis moved from feeding to overwintering areas, three migratory groups emerged. After leaving Plum Island Estuary, about half of the fish were detected only in a mid-latitude array, Long Island Sound. The other half of the tagged fish were detected during autumn and winter in a more southern array, the Delaware Estuary. This latter group of fish may have used two routes. Some travelled to the Delaware Estuary through Long Island Sound while other fish may have taken a second, more direct, coastal route that did not include Long Island Sound. Consequently, a seemingly homogeneous group of fish tagged at the same time in the same non-natal feeding location exhibited a diversity of southward movement patterns that could affect population-level processes. These three groups that differed in overwintering location and migration route could be movement contingents with migratory connectivity.
- Published
- 2010
6. Role of origin and release location in pre-spawning distribution and movements of anadromous alewife
- Author
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John T. Finn, Holly J. Frank, Robert M. Muth, Joseph M. Smith, and Martha E. Mather
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Fish migration ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Population ,Alosa pseudoharengus ,Alewife ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Spatial Mosaic ,biology.organism_classification ,Spawn (biology) ,Management tool ,Fishery ,Habitat ,education - Abstract
Capturing adult anadromous fish that are ready to spawn from a self sustaining population and transferring them into a depleted system is a common fisheries enhancement tool. The behaviour of these transplanted fish, however, has not been fully evaluated. The movements of stocked and native anadromous alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus (Wilson), were monitored in the Ipswich River, Massachusetts, USA, to provide a scientific basis for this management tool. Radiotelemetry was used to examine the effect of origin (native or stocked) and release location (upstream or downstream) on distribution and movement during the spawning migration. Native fish remained in the river longer than stocked fish regardless of release location. Release location and origin influenced where fish spent time and how they moved. The spatial mosaic of available habitats and the entire trajectory of freshwater movements should be considered to restore effectively spawners that traverse tens of kilometres within coastal rivers.
- Published
- 2010
7. Seasonal Use of a New England Estuary by Foraging Contingents of Migratory Striped Bass
- Author
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Robert M. Muth, Martha E. Mather, Linda A. Deegan, Sarah M. Pautzke, and John T. Finn
- Subjects
Fishery ,Bass (fish) ,Geography ,food.ingredient ,food ,New england ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Morone saxatilis ,Foraging ,Estuary ,Aquatic Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Predation - Abstract
Using acoustic telemetry on migratory striped bass Morone saxatilis in Plum Island Estuary (PIE), Massachusetts, we found that striped bass (335–634 mm total length) tagged in the spring and summer of 2005 (n = 14) and 2006 (n = 46) stayed in the estuary for an average of 66.0 d in 2005 and 72.2 d in 2006. Striped bass spent the most time in two specific reaches: middle Plum Island Sound and lower Rowley River. In both years, three different use-groups of striped bass were observed in PIE. Short-term visitors (n = 24) stayed in the estuary only briefly (range = 5–20 d). Two groups of seasonal residents stayed for more than 30 d, either in the Rowley River (n = 14) or in Plum Island Sound (n = 22). Within PIE, the two seasonal-resident use-groups may be foraging contingents that learn how to feed efficiently in specific parts of the estuary. These distinct within-estuary use patterns could have different implications for striped bass condition and prey impact.
- Published
- 2010
8. The Adopt-a-Herring Program as a Fisheries Conservation Tool
- Author
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Holly J. Frank, Sarah M. Pautzke, Robert M. Muth, Martha E. Mather, Joseph M. Smith, and John T. Finn
- Subjects
Alosa ,food.ingredient ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Stakeholder ,Aquatic Science ,Aquatic organisms ,Fishery ,Outreach ,food ,Herring ,Geography ,Sustainability ,%22">Fish ,business ,Watershed restoration ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Successful conservation depends on a scientifically literate public. We developed the Adopt-A-Herring program to educate nonscientists about fisheries and watershed restoration. This interactive educational and outreach project encouraged coastal residents to be involved in local watershed restoration. In the northeastern United States, river herring (Alosa spp.) are an important component of many coastal watersheds and often are the object of conservation efforts. In order to understand river herring spawning behavior and to improve the effectiveness of restoration efforts, our research tracked these fish via radiotelemetry in the lpswich River, Massachusetts. In our Adopt-A-Herring Program, participating stakeholder organizations adopted and named individual tagged river herring and followed their movements online. We also made information available to our adopters on our larger research goals, the mission and activities of other research and management agencies, examples of human actions that ...
- Published
- 2009
9. Stakeholder Norms Toward Beaver Management in Massachusetts
- Author
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Robert M. Muth, William F. Siemer, Rodney R. Zwick, Sandra A. Jonker, and John F. Organ
- Subjects
Castor canadensis ,Beaver ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,biology ,Population ,Wildlife ,Stakeholder ,biology.organism_classification ,eye diseases ,Wildlife protection ,Geography ,Environmental protection ,biology.animal ,parasitic diseases ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Complaint ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Negative perception ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,General Environmental Science ,Demography - Abstract
In Massachusetts, USA, both human and beaver (Castor canadensis) population levels are increasing, beaver damage complaints are escalating, and beaver management options are restricted by the 1996 Wildlife Protection Act. We looked at the public's norms toward beavers in Massachusetts. In 2002 we sent a mail-back questionnaire to a random sample of 5,563 residents in 3 geographic regions in Massachusetts and to residents who submitted a beaver complaint to Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (MassWildlife) in 1999–2000 (47.3% overall response rate). Respondents supported some form of beaver management. As severity of beaver damage was perceived to increase, respondents were more willing to accept lethal management and control of beavers. These results emphasize the importance of how tolerance and acceptability of wildlife are influenced by the type of activity the animal is engaged in, the type of management action that is proposed, the positive or negative perception of a species in...
- Published
- 2009
10. What is 'fallback'?: metrics needed to assess telemetry tag effects on anadromous fish behavior
- Author
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Joseph M. Smith, Holly J. Frank, Martha E. Mather, John T. Finn, Stephen D. McCormick, and Robert M. Muth
- Subjects
Upstream and downstream (DNA) ,Fish migration ,biology ,Blood chemistry ,Downstream (software development) ,Movement (music) ,Ecology ,Telemetry ,Alosa pseudoharengus ,Upstream (networking) ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification - Abstract
Telemetry has allowed researchers to document the upstream migrations of anadromous fish in freshwater. In many anadromous alosine telemetry studies, researchers use downstream movements (“fallback”) as a behavioral field bioassay for adverse tag effects. However, these downstream movements have not been uniformly reported or interpreted. We quantified movement trajectories of radio-tagged anadromous alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus) in the Ipswich River, Massachusetts (USA) and tested blood chemistry of tagged and untagged fish held 24 h. A diverse repertoire of movements was observed, which could be quantified using (a) direction of initial movements, (b) timing, and (c) characteristics of bouts of coupled upstream and downstream movements (e.g., direction, distance, duration, and speed). Because downstream movements of individual fish were almost always made in combination with upstream movements, these should be examined together. Several of the movement patterns described here could fall under the traditional definition of “fallback” but were not necessarily aberrant. Because superficially similar movements could have quite different interpretations, post-tagging trajectories need more precise definitions. The set of metrics we propose here will help quantify tag effects in the field, and provide the basis for a conceptual framework that helps define the complicated behaviors seen in telemetry studies on alewives and other fish in the field.
- Published
- 2009
11. Experiences with Beaver Damage and Attitudes of Massachusetts Residents Toward Beaver
- Author
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Sandra A. Jonker, Robert M. Muth, Rodney R. Zwick, John F. Organ, and William F. Siemer
- Subjects
Castor canadensis ,education.field_of_study ,Beaver ,biology ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Population ,Wildlife ,biology.organism_classification ,Ballot ,Geography ,biology.animal ,Complaint ,Wildlife management ,business ,education ,Socioeconomics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Wildlife conservation - Abstract
As stakeholder attitudes, values, and management preferences become increasingly diverse, managing human-wildlife conflicts will become more difficult. This challenge is especially evident in Massachusetts, USA, where furbearer management has been constrained by passage of a ballot initiative that outlawed use of foothold and body-gripping traps except in specific instances involving threats to human health or safety. Without regulated trapping, beaver (Castor canadensis) populations and damage attributed to them have increased. To develop an understanding of public attitudes regarding beaver-related management issues, we surveyed a random sample of Massachusetts residents in the spring of 2002 within 3 geographic regions where beaver are prevalent, as well as all individuals who submitted a beaver-related complaint to the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife in 1999 and 2000. We found that respondents held generally positive attitudes toward beaver. Respondents who experienced beaver-related problems tended to have less favorable or negative attitudes toward beaver than people who did not experience beaver damage. Attitudes toward beaver became increasingly negative as the severity of damage experienced by people increased. We believe continued public support for wildlife conservation will require implementation of strategies that are responsive to changing attitudes of an urban population and within social-acceptance and biological carrying capacities.
- Published
- 2006
12. Unnecessary Source of Pain and Suffering or Necessary Management Tool: Attitudes of Conservation Professionals Toward Outlawing Leghold Traps
- Author
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Martha E. Mather, Sandra A. Jonker, John F. Organ, Robert M. Muth, John J. Daigle, and Rodney R. Zwick
- Subjects
business.industry ,Pain and suffering ,Environmental resource management ,Wildlife ,Legislation ,Legislature ,Public relations ,Harm ,Political science ,Opinion poll ,Wildlife management ,business ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Wildlife conservation - Abstract
One particularly complex issue confronting wildlife conservation is the role of regulated trapping as a management tool. Public opinion polls, recent ballot initiatives and referenda, and the continual introduction (and uneven success) of antitrapping legislation in state legislatures illustrate the intensity of public controversy surrounding trapping. Little is known, however, about the perspectives of wildlife and fisheries conservation professionals regarding traps and trapping. We conducted a survey to explore the attitudes and values of conservation professionals regarding a variety of conservation-related issues including whether to outlaw use of leghold traps. We sent a mailback questionnaire to a stratified random sample of 1,000 members each of The Wildlife Society, American Fisheries Society, North American Wildlife Enforcement Officers' Association, and Society for Conservation Biology. We achieved an 81% overall response rate. Respondents were divided on whether to outlaw leghold traps; 46% favored outlawing use of the leghold trap, 39% opposed outlawing its use, and 15% had no opinion. Those who favored outlawing leghold traps believed they cause unnecessary animal pain or stress, may harm nontargets, and are not a necessary management tool. The 3 most frequently mentioned reasons offered in support of not outlawing the leghold traps were efficiency of harvest, they are an important tool for managing furbearers, and that they did not adversely affect furbearer populations. Responses differed by organization membership, employer, gender, and whether or not respondents were a hunter and/or trapper. Our results suggest that conservation professionals may be as conflicted about use of the leghold trap as are public stakeholders. We believe our findings pose important questions that conservation professionals must consider if they are to provide the leadership to more effectively address wildlife management conflicts.
- Published
- 2006
13. Illegal harvest of renewable natural resources in North America: Toward a typology of the motivations for poaching
- Author
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John F. Bowe and Robert M. Muth
- Subjects
Resource (biology) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Natural resource economics ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Fishing ,Law enforcement ,Wildlife ,Poaching ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Development ,Natural resource ,Environmental education ,Economics ,business ,Recreation - Abstract
In many areas of North America, illegal hunting, fishing, and gathering of renewable natural resources are occurring with alarming and increasing frequency. Resource professionals, law enforcement officers, and the general public are becoming increasingly concerned about the poaching problem, as localized populations of wildlife, fish, and plant species are threatened with extirpation, and as legitimate users—consumptive and nonconsumptive alike—are deprived of resource utilization opportunities. An important step toward developing more effective environmental education, public information, and law enforcement programs to combat poaching is to develop an understanding of why people poach. Based on a literature review and content analysis, we summarized and classified the motivations for poaching that appeared in the literature into the following typology: (1) commercial gain, (2) household consumption, (3) recreational satisfactions, (4) trophy poaching, (5) thrill killing, (6) protection of self and prop...
- Published
- 1998
14. Trappers and trapping in advanced industrial society: Economic and socio cultural values of furbearer utilization in the northeastern united states
- Author
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John J. Daigle, Ronald J. Giass, Rodney R. Zwick, and Robert M. Muth
- Subjects
Economic growth ,education.field_of_study ,Sociology and Political Science ,Industrial society ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Sociocultural values ,Geography ,State (polity) ,Respondent ,Cultural values ,Life interest ,education ,Recreation ,media_common - Abstract
The purchase of trapping licenses in the northeastern United States has been declining for several years. Despite the decline in trapping activity, participation by a core group of trappers persists. To elucidate the economic and sociocultural values associated with present‐day trapping activities in the northeastern United States, several state and federal agencies and two academic institutions cooperated in a multistate study of trapping attitudes, values, motivations, and behavior. Results suggest that trappers continue to participate in trapping for a variety of sociocultural values and motivations, including the multiple satisfactions derived from involvement in an enduring recreational central life interest. Trapping to procure income and to provide in‐kind contributions to the household economy represent important motives and meanings to a smaller segment of the respondent population.
- Published
- 1996
15. Management Issues and Their Relative Priority within State Fisheries Agencies
- Author
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Robert M. Muth, Martha E. Mather, Donna L. Parrish, and Roy A. Stein
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Response rate (survey) ,business.industry ,Fishing ,Environmental resource management ,Aquatic Science ,Fisheries law ,Fishery ,Stocking ,Work (electrical) ,Agency (sociology) ,Fisheries management ,Business ,Hydropower ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
For researchers and managers to work together for greatest mutual benefit, researchers must understand what issues fisheries managers consider most important. To assess management priorities, we conducted a mail survey asking U.S. state fisheries agencies to identify the priority, based on personnel time, they place on 12 fisheries management issues. Based on an 88% response rate, we determined relative emphases across (1) management issues, (2) geographic regions, and (3) freshwater or marine orientations. Issues directly linked to sport and commercial fishers, i.e., stocking, harvest regulations, fishing pressure, and exploring recruitment, were of paramount importance in all agency time budgets. The issue that included conflict, policy, and human dimensions concerns also was identified as “high priority.” Six other issues—habitat restoration, hydropower licensing, instream flow, contaminants, introduced species, and nongame species—were of “moderate priority” nationwide. Approximately 50% of t...
- Published
- 1995
16. Assessing developmental impacts on subsistence fishing: Complications attributable to a mixed economic system
- Author
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Thomas A. More, Robert M. Muth, Jack Kruse, and Ronald J. Glass
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Sociology and Political Science ,Impact assessment ,Natural resource economics ,Economic sector ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fishing ,Subsistence agriculture ,Subsistence economy ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Development ,Economics ,Quality (business) ,Rural area ,Sociocultural evolution ,media_common - Abstract
There is no all‐encompassing measure of quality of life that adequately reflects the psychological, sociocultural, environmental, and economic components of subsistence. Even if only the material aspects of quality are considered, impact assessment in rural areas of Alaska is complicated because communities have integrated three‐sector economies. Because both state and federal laws give the highest priority to subsistence users of fishery resources, reductions in fish populations may be manifested in reduced commercial and sport harvests rather than the subsistence take. Impact analysis is complicated because the same individuals may participate in each of these economic sectors. Nevertheless, quantifying material returns such as income and subsistence goods can provide useful insights, even though interpretation of values originating in different contexts are necessarily subjective. Furthermore, these measures are inputs to the quality of life rather than measures of it.
- Published
- 1995
17. The persistence of poaching in advanced industrial society: Meanings and motivations—An introductory comment
- Author
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Robert M. Muth
- Subjects
Persistence (psychology) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Industrial society ,Poaching ,Sociology ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Development ,Social science ,Natural resource - Abstract
(1998). The persistence of poaching in advanced industrial society: Meanings and motivations—An introductory comment. Society & Natural Resources: Vol. 11, The Persistence of Poaching in Advanced Industrial Society: Meanings and Motivations, pp. 5-7.
- Published
- 1998
18. Subsistence as a component of the mixed economic base in a modernizing community
- Author
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Ronald J. Glass, Robert M. Muth, and Robert Flewelling
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Rural economy ,Economy ,Rural community ,Economic sector ,Component (UML) ,Economics ,Subsistence agriculture ,Economic base analysis ,Subsistence economy ,Natural resource - Abstract
In this paper, the mixed economic base of a modernizing rural community is examined with emphasis on the interrelationships between personal use of natural resources and other sectors of the economy.
- Published
- 1990
19. A Biosocial Approach for Analyzing Environmental Conflicts: A Case Study of Horseshoe Crab Allocation
- Author
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Robert M. Muth, Martha E. Mather, and Jay Odell
- Subjects
Resource (biology) ,Conceptual framework ,Human systems engineering ,Ecotourism ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Conflict resolution ,Human ecology ,Sociology ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,Natural resource ,Biosocial theory - Abstract
Ambiguous legislation, insufficient science, jurisdictional disputes, and conflicting values of stakeholders have contributed to the increasing frequency of natural resource conflicts. The allocation of horseshoe crabs in Delaware Bay and Cape Cod Bay can serve as a model system for understanding resource conflicts, because relationships among biophysical and human systems in this example typify many environmental controversies. Herein, we use an interaction web to build a conceptual framework for identifying potential conflicts. Specifically, we identify four subconflicts involving horseshoe crabs, human shellfishers, commercial fishers, the biomedical industry, birdwatchers, and environmental interest groups. Stakeholders hold different attitudes concerning the horseshoe crab and thus advocate competing policy preferences in the political process. An important step in understanding environmental conflicts is to clarify differences in social meanings, attitudes, and values. The integrated approach described here, by depicting and graphically displaying biosocial relationships, can provide a generalized approach for understanding a broad range of environmental conflicts.
- Published
- 2005
20. SOCIAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT IN NATURAL RESOURCE DECISION MAKING: TOWARD A STRUCTURAL PARADIGM
- Author
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Robert M. Muth and Robert G. Lee
- Subjects
Variables ,Social impact assessment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Predictive power ,Population growth ,Regression analysis ,Sociology ,Guttman scale ,Marketing ,Mental health ,Social psychology ,Natural resource ,media_common - Abstract
As social impact assessment continues to mature as an area of professional endeavor, social scientists are becoming increasingly aware of the importance of social structure as a variable requiring analysis in social impact assessment studies. This paper reports the results of research in which community social structure was specifically examined as an independent variable in a regional system of 52 rural communities in Alaska. A macrostructural survey instrument was employed to inventory elements of community social structure provided by key informant interviews and a variety of secondary sources. Communities' were then ranked according to their relative structural differentiation by means of Guttman scale analysis. Multiple regression analysis indicated that structural differentiation possesses greater predictive power than traditional aggregate variables (population level, rate of population increase) in explaining rates of community social pathology (mental health rates and divorce). The utili...
- Published
- 1986
21. Pitfalls and Limitations in the Use of Fishery Valuation Techniques
- Author
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Ronald J. Glass and Robert M. Muth
- Subjects
Fishery ,Actuarial science ,Public ownership ,TheoryofComputation_GENERAL ,Business ,Aquatic Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
While considerable effort has been undertaken to develop fishery valuation techniques, there has been limited success in applying the results to management situations. Most of these valuation measures have been economic in nature so they must be interpreted within a broader context of valuation with particular concern for the objectives of public ownership and management. Added to the conceptual shortcomings of many valuation techniques are difficulties in securing consistent and accurate measurements. All of these limitations must be considered when valuation measures are applied to resource management situations.
- Published
- 1987
22. Subsistence Use of Fisheries Resources in Alaska: Implications for Great Lakes Fisheries Management
- Author
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Robert M. Muth, Ronald J. Glass, and David E. Ruppert
- Subjects
Fishery ,Geography ,Kinship ,Wildlife ,Subsistence agriculture ,Context (language use) ,Subsistence economy ,Fisheries management ,Aquatic Science ,Recreation ,Natural resource ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Use of fisheries resources for subsistence by rural populations is becoming an increasingly controversial issue in industrialized societies. Alaska is the only state which has enacted a law to provide for subsistence uses of renewable natural resources by both natives and nonnatives. The legal context of subsistence allocation and management is governed by both state and federal laws that currently ascribe subsistence rights only to rural Alaskan residents. These laws also provide priority allocation of fish and wildlife to subsistence users over other uses if harvest reductions are necessary to maintain viable fish and wildlife populations. Subsistence serves a variety of social, economic, and cultural functions in the lifestyles of Alaskan residents, including kinship cohesion, in-kind supplements to income, and maintenance of important ceremonial activities. Great Lakes fisheries managers are intimately familiar with the values and meanings associated with commercial and recreational uses of G...
- Published
- 1987
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