2014
DOI: 10.1111/nrm.12034
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The Economics of Conflicting Interests: Northern Baltic Salmon Fishery Adaption to Gray Seal Abundance

Abstract: The successful conservation of gray seals has led to increased seal‐induced damage to the Atlantic salmon fisheries of the Baltic Sea. This paper addresses the conflict between the conservation of a formerly endangered species, the gray seal, and professional fishermen, whose livelihoods are affected by both seal‐induced damage and salmon fisheries management. We develop a bioeconomic model that incorporates the age structure of Atlantic salmon and gray seal populations. To determine the social optimum, we max… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Grey seals eat mature salmon from both salmon trap nets and the open sea (Lundström et al 2010;Suuronen and Lehtonen 2012). This implies that grey seals contribute both a natural mortality rate to the salmon population through mortality function and a fishery cost through the damage function at this spawning (Holma et al 2014;ICES 2016;Michielsens et al 2006). The damage function refers to the impact that salmon are eaten by seals from the fishery catch (in trap nets), which was adopted from Holma et al (2014).…”
Section: Model Schemementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Grey seals eat mature salmon from both salmon trap nets and the open sea (Lundström et al 2010;Suuronen and Lehtonen 2012). This implies that grey seals contribute both a natural mortality rate to the salmon population through mortality function and a fishery cost through the damage function at this spawning (Holma et al 2014;ICES 2016;Michielsens et al 2006). The damage function refers to the impact that salmon are eaten by seals from the fishery catch (in trap nets), which was adopted from Holma et al (2014).…”
Section: Model Schemementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Equations ( 1) and (2) (in Table 1) describe the population structure of the submodels for each species. The grey seal model and the salmon model were extended from Holma et al (2014), and the herring model was revised from ICES (2013b), Nieminen et al (2012) and Kulmala et al (2007). Depending on which species is referenced, the superscript species in the Eq.…”
Section: Biological Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As the seal population has increased, predation on valuable fish and damages caused by seals to fishing gear are increasingly seen as problems ( Holma et al, 2014 , Varjopuro, 2011 ). On the other hand, it has been proposed that abundant seal populations could boost tourism in coastal communities.…”
Section: Examplesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conflicts between fisheries and seals in terms of both bycatch and fishery damage have been reported recently (Lunneryd et al 2003;Jounela et al 2006;Lundström et al 2010;Hale et al 2011;Cronin et al 2014;Holma et al 2014 ) and are becoming more frequent due to an increase in seal populations as a result of conservation management and a resulting decrease in fish populations as a fisheries resource. However, strategies for managing seals have not yet been established (Butler et al 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%