Bioeconomics

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fisheries
science
water column
marine snow
upwelling
shelf pump
oceanic gyres
humboldt current
eutrophication
acidification
dead zone
red tide
biomass
baseline
population
measurement
bioeconomics
marine biology
oceanography
conservation
GLOBEC
personalities
research institutes

sustainablity
fishing
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In resource economics, bioeconomics studies the dynamics of living resources in using economic models. Bioeconomics leans heavily on mathematical modeling and optimal control theory.

Bioeconomics is closely related to the early development of theories in fisheries economics, first of all by the seminal works of two Canadian economists in the mid fifties; Scott Gordon and Anthony Scott (Gordon, 1954; Scott, 1955). Their ideas were not new, but they managed to utilise recent achievements within biological fisheries modelling, first of all the works by Schaefer (1957) on establishing a formal relationship between fishing activities and biological growth through mathematical modelling confirmed by empirical studies. It was no coincidence that these results were achieved in the multidisciplinary fisheries science environment in Canada at the time. Fisheries science and modelling developed rapidly during a productive and innovative period, particularly among Canadian fisheries researchers of different disciplines. Population modelling and fishing mortality were introduced to economists and new interdisciplinary modelling tools became available for the economists, which made it possible at the same time to evaluate biological and economic impacts of different fishing activities, controlled or not by management decisions.

The science of bioeconomics is the discipline originating from the synthesis of biology and economics. It is an attempt to bridge, through the concept of holism and interdisciplinary methodology, the empirical culture of biology and the theoretical culture of economics through a paradigmatic shift in the development of the economy-environment disciplines such as natural resource economics, environmental economics and ecological economics.

[edit] References

  • Springer Journal of Bioeconomics[1]
  • H. Scott Gordon (1954). The Economic Theory of a Common-Property Resource: The Fishery. The Journal of Political Economy 62(2): 124-142.
  • M. B. Schaefer (1957). Some considerations of population dynamics and economics in relation to the management of marine fishes. Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 14: 669-81.
  • kabir i. falau(2008). The modern Economics: The Objectives of Sole Ownership. The Journal of Political Economy 63(2): 116-124.

[edit] See also

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