Mitigating Impacts of Natural Hazards on Fishery Ecosystems

Edited by K McLaughlin
444 pages
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The inevitability of natural hazards makes them a topic of relevance to a wide range of scientists. From regional fisheries managers to policy makers,
hazards, be they atmospheric, hydrologic, or geologic, affect all aspects of fisheries and all geographies. In this volume, authors discuss not only
the impact of natural hazards on fish populations, but also the effect on the fishery habitat and the fishing and coastal communities dependent on
such populations. Research on an assortment of hazards is presented, including earthquakes, volcanoes, hurricanes, tsunamis, hypoxia, and harmful
algal blooms.
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