American Fisheries Society • DEC 2012 Our Best Gifts
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VOL 37 NO 12 FisheriesAmerican Fisheries Society • www.fisheries.org DEC 2012 Our Best Gifts Fisheries in Film Mentoring as a Legacy Ohio’s Lake Erie Charter Fishing Industry Future Trout Management Guided by Climate Trends 03632415(2012)37(12) Advancing an Ecosystem Approach in the Gulf of Maine Robert L. Stephenson, John H. Annala, Jeffrey A. Runge, and Madeleine Hall-Arber, editors The Gulf of Maine (GOM) is arguably one of the best studied marine ecosystems in the world. Interest in its physical environment, fisheries, and Canada/USA boundary have resulted in considerable research attention for more than a century. The GOM is also highly managed by two nations with a commitment to implementing an ecosystem approach to management. The papers in this book review the management and policy tools and approaches required to implement integrated policy and management in the GOM; synthesize the current ecological and oceanographic understanding of the GOM, and the social, economic, and cultural inter- actions within the gulf; assess anthropogenic and external in- fluences on the gulf ecosystem; and examine the science re- quired to observe and predict changes in the GOM ecosystem, along with strategies to imple- ment an ecosystem approach to management. 415 pages, paper List price: $79.00 AFS Member price: $55.00 Item Number: 540.79P Published October 2012 TO ORDER: Online: www.afsbooks.org American Fisheries Society c/o Books International P.O. Box 605 Herndon, VA 20172 Phone: 703-661-1570 Fax: 703-996-1010 Fisheries VOL 37 NO 12 DEC 2012 Contents COLUMNS President’s Hook 531 Developing a Legacy Through Mentoring The mentor/mentee relationship works best when there is a sustained interpersonal chemistry between the parties that grows out of the true desire of the mentor to help the mentee, the desire of the mentee to be helped, and mutual respect. John Boreman — AFS President Guest Director’s Line 569 Gifts for the Holiday Season The gifts we can give and receive in the classroom of the great outdoors. Donald C. Jackson FEATURES Lake Erie charter boats await passengers for a great day of Socioeconomics 538 fishing. Photo Credit: Ohio Sea Grant. 532 Ohio’s 2010 Lake Erie Charter Fishing Industry Captains from the Great Lakes largest charter fleet respond to the Seventh Ohio Sea Grant Socioeconomic Survey of FOURTH CALL FOR PAPERS Ohio’s Lake Erie charter industry. 563 2013 Annual Meeting — Little Rock, Arkansas Joseph E. Lucente, Tory Gabriel, Gregory Davis, Colleen Wellington, and Frank Lichtkoppler UNIT NEWS Fisheries Management 542 The Past as Prelude to the Future for Understand- 567 News from the International Fisheries Section ing 21st Century Climate Effects on Rocky Mountain Trout Brian Bellgraph Patterns within five case history watersheds across the Rocky Mountains provide evidence of ongoing climate REVIEW change and highlight geographic differences in the vulnerability of trout populations. 568 Using Film Documentaries as Fisheries Teaching Daniel J. Isaak, Clint C. Muhlfeld, Andrew S. Todd, Robert Tools — Taking Stock and Gutted Al-Chokhachy, James Roberts, Jeffrey L. Kershner, Kurt D. The demise of Scotland’s fishing industry. Fausch, and Steven W. Hostetler Francis Juanes AWARDS JOURNAL HIGHLIGHTS 557 Steven Berkeley Marine Conservation Fellowship 571 North American Journal of Aquaculture, Volume 47, Announcement Number 4, October 2012 558 Section Awards — AFS 142nd Annual Meeting, 2012, CALENDAR Minneapolis, Minnesota 572 Fisheries Events 559 Call For Award Nominations — AFS 143rd Annual Meeting, 2013, Little Rock, Arkansas ANNOUNCEMENTS 573 December 2012 Jobs Cover: Climate change will exacerbate many habitat fragmentation issues like this blockage of a kokanee salmon migration by low ANNUAL INDEX 575 summer flows at a poorly fit road culvert. Proactive and strategic habitat restoration and management will be needed to help minimize the impacts of a changing climate on fish populations. Photo credit: Clayton Nalder. 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I was seven or eight at the time, and Bill was renting the farmhouse next door to my Think about the num- grandmother’s summer cottage in the Catskills. In the evening, ber of people you have when Bill got home from work, he and I would dig earthworms mentored during your ca- from the garden, put them in a tin can (keep in mind that this reer, even if it has been was the mid-1950s), grab our fishing poles and start heading up a short one so far. What Shandelee Creek (a tributary of the Willowemoc River that ran situations created the behind our houses), looking for a pool with the perfect over- mentoring opportunities? hanging rock that might hide a brookie. He taught me how to What information, skills, use a fishing reel, tie a hook on a line, put a worm on the hook, or experience did you im- AFS President Boreman may be contacted at: and drop the bait slowly alongside the rock. If I was lucky (it part to your mentees? Did [email protected] was all luck for me in those days and probably still is) the bait they benefit from the ex- would be grabbed just before it hit bottom.