Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District)

For more than 55 years, data have been collected on the population of pikeEsox lucius in Windermere, first by the Freshwater Biological Association(FBA) and, since 1989, by the Institute of Freshwater Ecology (IFE) of theNERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. During this time the fishingmethodology...

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Main Authors: Charles Paxton, Ian Winfield
Language:English
Published: Freshwater Biological Assoication 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.fba.org.uk/journals/index.php/FF/article/view/205
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spelling ftfbaojs:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/205 2023-05-15T14:30:08+02:00 Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District) Charles Paxton Ian Winfield UK; Windermere 2010-05-14 application/pdf https://www.fba.org.uk/journals/index.php/FF/article/view/205 en eng Freshwater Biological Assoication Transfer of copyright agreement Submission of a manuscript indicates a tacit understanding that the paper is not actively under consideration for publication with other journals. In submitting a paper the submitting author is deemed to have read, understood and accepted the terms of the copyright agreement. Copyright Statement The named article is submitted for publication in Freshwater Forum . This article has not been published previously and it is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Copyright to the above work (including all original text, photographs, images, tables and graphs) is hereby transferred to the Freshwater Biological Association (FBA). The submitting author accepts responsibility for transferring copyright on behalf of any co-authors. The submitting author undertakes to ensure he or she has the suitable rights to all content and are legally permitted to transfer ownership to the FBA. The author(s) retains the right to: 1. Display their own version of the article as originally submitted on their personal/academic website(s) with a link to the final version on Freshwater Forum 2. Use (and permit others to use) the article within their own organisation for non-commercial uses e.g. for teaching purposes, on the condition that the Freshwater Biological Association is cited correctly as the publisher. Freshwater Forum will publish the above article electronically on its electronic journal server and also in hard copy format. Transfer of copyright covers the right to reproduce and distribute the article and all of its components. Freshwater Forum may also make the article available to developing countries via Access to Global Online Research in Agriculture (AGORA) and Online Access to Research in the Environment (OARE). This copyright agreement will become binding from the date of article submission. It is anticipated that in most circumstances permission to reproduce the article will be given to the author, providing the FBA is acknowledged. E Freshwater Forum; Vol 14, No 1 (2000) statistics gill net pike brown trout artic charr 2010 ftfbaojs 2019-09-01T07:50:55Z For more than 55 years, data have been collected on the population of pikeEsox lucius in Windermere, first by the Freshwater Biological Association(FBA) and, since 1989, by the Institute of Freshwater Ecology (IFE) of theNERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. During this time the fishingmethodology has been constant although the actual fishing effort has lessenedconsiderably as the rationale behind the programme has changed. The originalaim of the fishery was to reduce pike numbers (Worthington 1950), in order toprotect stocks of brown trout Salmo trutta - for which there was a sportfishery - and stocks of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus, which had beenexploited for several centuries by seine netting and a small plumb-line fishery(Kipling 1972, 1984). However, through time this original policy has evolvedinto a population monitoring programme. Other/Unknown Material Arctic charr Arctic Esox lucius Salvelinus alpinus FBA Journal System (Freshwater Biological Association) Arctic English Lake ENVELOPE(-106.601,-106.601,59.500,59.500)
institution Open Polar
collection FBA Journal System (Freshwater Biological Association)
op_collection_id ftfbaojs
language English
topic statistics
gill net
pike
brown trout
artic charr
spellingShingle statistics
gill net
pike
brown trout
artic charr
Charles Paxton
Ian Winfield
Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District)
topic_facet statistics
gill net
pike
brown trout
artic charr
description For more than 55 years, data have been collected on the population of pikeEsox lucius in Windermere, first by the Freshwater Biological Association(FBA) and, since 1989, by the Institute of Freshwater Ecology (IFE) of theNERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. During this time the fishingmethodology has been constant although the actual fishing effort has lessenedconsiderably as the rationale behind the programme has changed. The originalaim of the fishery was to reduce pike numbers (Worthington 1950), in order toprotect stocks of brown trout Salmo trutta - for which there was a sportfishery - and stocks of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus, which had beenexploited for several centuries by seine netting and a small plumb-line fishery(Kipling 1972, 1984). However, through time this original policy has evolvedinto a population monitoring programme.
author Charles Paxton
Ian Winfield
author_facet Charles Paxton
Ian Winfield
author_sort Charles Paxton
title Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District)
title_short Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District)
title_full Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District)
title_fullStr Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District)
title_full_unstemmed Some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike Esox lucius in Windermere (English Lake District)
title_sort some statistical aspects of the long-term gill net monitoring programme for pike esox lucius in windermere (english lake district)
publisher Freshwater Biological Assoication
publishDate 2010
url https://www.fba.org.uk/journals/index.php/FF/article/view/205
op_coverage UK; Windermere
long_lat ENVELOPE(-106.601,-106.601,59.500,59.500)
geographic Arctic
English Lake
geographic_facet Arctic
English Lake
genre Arctic charr
Arctic
Esox lucius
Salvelinus alpinus
genre_facet Arctic charr
Arctic
Esox lucius
Salvelinus alpinus
op_source Freshwater Forum; Vol 14, No 1 (2000)
op_rights Transfer of copyright agreement Submission of a manuscript indicates a tacit understanding that the paper is not actively under consideration for publication with other journals. In submitting a paper the submitting author is deemed to have read, understood and accepted the terms of the copyright agreement. Copyright Statement The named article is submitted for publication in Freshwater Forum . This article has not been published previously and it is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Copyright to the above work (including all original text, photographs, images, tables and graphs) is hereby transferred to the Freshwater Biological Association (FBA). The submitting author accepts responsibility for transferring copyright on behalf of any co-authors. The submitting author undertakes to ensure he or she has the suitable rights to all content and are legally permitted to transfer ownership to the FBA. The author(s) retains the right to: 1. Display their own version of the article as originally submitted on their personal/academic website(s) with a link to the final version on Freshwater Forum
2. Use (and permit others to use) the article within their own organisation for non-commercial uses e.g. for teaching purposes, on the condition that the Freshwater Biological Association is cited correctly as the publisher. Freshwater Forum will publish the above article electronically on its electronic journal server and also in hard copy format. Transfer of copyright covers the right to reproduce and distribute the article and all of its components. Freshwater Forum may also make the article available to developing countries via Access to Global Online Research in Agriculture (AGORA) and Online Access to Research in the Environment (OARE). This copyright agreement will become binding from the date of article submission. It is anticipated that in most circumstances permission to reproduce the article will be given to the author, providing the FBA is acknowledged. E
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