[SAFS Bevan Series Guest Lecture]: Minding the Gap: Spanning the Boundary Between Science and Policy, Angela Bednarek of the Pew Charitable Trusts (2/8)
SAFS Bevan Speaker Series (1/25): Dr. Éva Plagányi: “Caught in the Middle: Sustaining Fisheries in a Changing Climate”
Bevan Series (SAFS weekly seminar): Truth-telling in the Salish Sea: The Black Art of Communicating Climate Change
The Bevan Series is a weekly guest-lecture series hosted by the UW School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences on Thursdays in winter quarter from 4:30-5:30 pm in FSH 102 Auditorium. The lectures are free and open to the public (no ticket required).
Lynda V. Mapes
The Seattle Times
Truth-telling in the Salish Sea: The Black Art of Communicating Climate Change
[SAFS Bevan Series]: “Fish and Fisheries in Hot Water: (How) Do We Adapt?”
Malin Pinsky
Rutgers University, Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources
Fish and Fisheries in Hot Water: (How) Do We Adapt?
The Bevan Series: weekly guest lectures at SAFS in winter
The Bevan Series is a popular annual event held one quarter each year, usually in the format of weekly seminars for 10 weeks, and on occasion as a two-day symposium. The series features internationally recognized experts seeking to examine current issues affecting fisheries and marine conservation, representing as many viewpoints as possible, focusing on solutions to pressing problems. All lectures are free and open to the public.
The Bevan Series is generously funded by the Donald E. Bevan Endowed Fund in Fisheries, the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, the Alaska Fisheries Science Center, and Washington Sea Grant. The Bevan Series was founded by Tanya Bevan as a tribute to her late husband, Don Bevan. Don’s academic career spanned almost 50 years at the University of Washington, during which time he was director of the School of Fisheries and dean of the College of Fisheries. His work focused on the key intersection between science, economics and politics, and he was deeply involved in the enactment and reauthorization of the Magnuson Act, which governs America’s marine fisheries. He worked tirelessly to ensure that fisheries managers, industry and scientists spoke with a unified voice in changing federal regulations, and also helped found what is now the UW School of Marine and Environmental Affairs.
The Bevan Series seeks to continue Don Bevan’s legacy.
The 2018 Bevan Series will be held at the University of Washington in the Fishery Sciences Auditorium (FSH 102) every Thursday afternoon at 4:30 during the Winter academic quarter. The address is 1122 NE Boat Street, Seattle, WA 98105 (map).
Join us for the first SAFS lecture today (Thursday, January 4) at 4:30 pm in FSH 102 Auditorium
speaker: Professor Ray Hillborn, Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, University of Washington
talk: Is U.S. Fisheries Policy Working? Getting the Message to Congress
[winter course]: FISH 437: Fisheries Oceanography
FSH 437: Fisheries Oceanography can fulfill the ‘Aquatic & Fishery Sciences elective’ requirement of the Marine Biology Minor.
FISH 437: Fisheries Oceanography
Winter, 2018
MWF: 9:30-10:20 AM, FSH 213
How does the environment impact abundance and distribution of early life stage fish and macro-invertebrate species?
Shellfish club meeting – this Wednesday, 10/18, 5:30
Hi Bivalve Aficionados,
[speaker]: Large whale satellite telemetry: A tool for determining habitat-use, distribution, and behavior of endangered whale populations.

Large whale satellite telemetry: A tool for determining habitat-use, distribution, and behavior of endangered whale populations.
Amy S. Kennedy, Ph D
JISAO and NOAA/NMFS/AFSC Marine Mammal Laboratory, Seattle, WA
Thursday, October 12, 2017 4:00 PM
Fishery Sciences Building, Room 102
Open advising – with guests from UW Study Abroad hosted in FSH lobby from 3:15-4:00 pm
Over the past decade, NOAA’s Marine Mammal Laboratory (MML) and JISAO scientists have partnered with local and international organizations to conduct satellite telemetry research on large whales in order to describe their fine-scale movement and habitat-use. In addition to ecological studies, projects detailing the physical and physiological effects of tagging on individuals and populations have been conducted. North Pacific right whales, humpbacks, and gray whales were tagged with the implantable configurations of SPOT5 and MK-10a transmitters produced by Wildlife Computers. The cylindrical tags are designed to penetrate the dorsal surface of the whale’s body and anchor in the blubber/muscle fascia. External components of the tag are made of surgical quality stainless steel and are sterilized prior to deployment. Results from these projects show that satellite telemetry is a powerful tool for collecting fine-scale movement data (particularly in remote areas) that cannot be obtained or predicted in any other manner. We found that while whales aggregate in well-known areas, there can be substantial individual movement variation within seasons. Results also show that whales are routinely crossing international borders, reinforcing the need for multinational collaboration when managing these endangered animals. Finally, our research has contributed greatly to improving tag designs and deployment techniques that minimize the physical impacts of tagging and maximize the longevity of transmission.
Bio
Dr. Amy Kennedy is a research scientist with JISAO at the Marine Mammal Marine Laboratory (a division of NOAA Fisheries) in Seattle, WA (USA). After receiving her doctorate from the University of Paris, Dr. Kennedy’s research goals have focused on telemetry-driven research and development, with emphasis on fine-scale cetacean habitat-use within high human impact regions and/or marine protected areas. Since she began tagging whales in 2009, she has deployed Argos-monitored implantable satellite tags (deployed using the Air Rocket Transmission System, ARTS) in humpback, right and gray whales in the Chukchi and Bering Seas, Gulf of Maine, Straits of Magellan, Dominican Republic, Arabian Sea, South Africa, Brazil, and the French West Indies. Dr. Kennedy’s current research focuses on using telemetry data to describe large whale habitat-use in breeding and feeding grounds.
[speaker]: The impact of density-dependent changes in individual life histories on marine population dynamics
The impact of density-dependent changes in individual life histories on marine population dynamics
André M. de Roos
Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics
University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Thursday, October 5, 2017 4:00 PM
Fishery Sciences Building, Room 102
Open advising about undergraduate programs hosted in FSH lobby from 3:30-4:00 pm
Historically, models describing the dynamics and management of marine populations are based on assumptions that poorly reflect the ecology of and the complex interactions between individual organisms and their environment. For example, the most often used multi-species models of fish communities only take into account the negative effect of predator-prey relations between fish species, that is, the mortality impact on the prey, but ignore the benefits of predation, the increase in mass of the predator. With an increasing demand for ecosystem based management this discrepancy between the models and the ecology becomes important to address. In this presentation I review how current fisheries models account for ecological processes. Subsequently, I will introduce a class of size-structured population models based on individual energetics that explicitly account for ecological interactions of individual fish. Analysis of models of this kind will be shown to not only increase our understanding of the mechanisms shaping fish community dynamics, but also make counterintuitive predictions about the outcome of fisheries management strategies. More specifically, it will be shown how intermediate levels of harvesting prey fish may promote rather than demote persistence of piscivores. Lastly, I will show how the same type of size-structured population models based on individual energetics can also be applied more generally, for example, to explain the persistent population oscillations that have been observed in Antarctic krill.
Bio: André de Roos’ research focuses on the relationship between individual life history and the dynamics of populations and communities. Whereas the main body of theory concerning population dynamics and community structure is based on the analysis of unstructured, Lotka-Volterra type population dynamic models, which ignore differences between individuals altogether, the defining feature of biological organisms is that they grow and develop throughout their life from the moment they are born till the moment they die. In between these individuals might reproduce, but the majority generally does not. Hence, after mortality ontogenetic development and growth in body size can be considered the most prominent life history processes, which furthermore commonly results in individuals playing a different ecological role in the different stages of their life history. Using a special class of physiologically structured population models, André de Roos theoretically explores the often counter-intuitive effects of density dependence in ontogenetic development on the dynamics and structure of marine communities.