Burgess et al. (2005, this issue) present a critique of two articles describing shark declines in the north-west Atlantic (Baum et al. 2003) and Gulf of Mexico (Baum and Myers 2004), and contend that we have overstated the results of our research. In these two papers, we examined trends in relative...

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http://www.fmap.ca/ramweb/papers-total/Baumetal2005.pdf
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.503.6257 2023-05-15T17:40:22+02:00 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives application/pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.503.6257 http://www.fmap.ca/ramweb/papers-total/Baumetal2005.pdf en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.503.6257 http://www.fmap.ca/ramweb/papers-total/Baumetal2005.pdf Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. http://www.fmap.ca/ramweb/papers-total/Baumetal2005.pdf text ftciteseerx 2016-01-08T09:15:38Z Burgess et al. (2005, this issue) present a critique of two articles describing shark declines in the north-west Atlantic (Baum et al. 2003) and Gulf of Mexico (Baum and Myers 2004), and contend that we have overstated the results of our research. In these two papers, we examined trends in relative abundance for multiple large pelagic shark species. Pelagic sharks include oceanic and coastal (denoted by *) species, and our research focused on 9 of the 17 species we modeled: those we analyzed at the species level (blue Prionace glauca, dusky * Carcharhinus obscurus, oceanic whitetip C. longimanus, silky * C. falciformis, tiger * Galeocerdo cuvier, white * Carcharodon car-charias), and those that dominated the species groups we analyzed (scalloped hammerhead * Sphyrna lewini Text North West Atlantic Unknown Burgess ENVELOPE(76.128,76.128,-69.415,-69.415) Myers ENVELOPE(170.033,170.033,-72.117,-72.117)
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description Burgess et al. (2005, this issue) present a critique of two articles describing shark declines in the north-west Atlantic (Baum et al. 2003) and Gulf of Mexico (Baum and Myers 2004), and contend that we have overstated the results of our research. In these two papers, we examined trends in relative abundance for multiple large pelagic shark species. Pelagic sharks include oceanic and coastal (denoted by *) species, and our research focused on 9 of the 17 species we modeled: those we analyzed at the species level (blue Prionace glauca, dusky * Carcharhinus obscurus, oceanic whitetip C. longimanus, silky * C. falciformis, tiger * Galeocerdo cuvier, white * Carcharodon car-charias), and those that dominated the species groups we analyzed (scalloped hammerhead * Sphyrna lewini
author2 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
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http://www.fmap.ca/ramweb/papers-total/Baumetal2005.pdf
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