A Demographic Profile of Participants in Two Gulf of Mexico Inshore Shrimp Fisheries and Their Response to the Texas Closure


Autoria(s): Nance, James M.; Garfield, Nina; Paredes, J. Anthony
Data(s)

1991

Resumo

A social study of the shrimp fisheries of Galveston Bay, Tex., and Calcasieu Lake, La., was made during the summer of 1987 to examine the impacts of the seasonal closure of the Federal waters off Texas and to understand the infrastructure and demographic processes of these two diverse fisheries. Survey instruments were administered to 159 shrimp boat captains: 89 from Galveston Bay and 70 from Calcasieu Lake. Shrimp-house owners were interviewed in each region as well. The results suggest that the inshore fisheries (i.e., shrimpers and shrimp houses) are distinct from the offshore fisheries. The infrastructure of the two inshore fisheries examined differ in that the market distribution of shrimp from Galveston Bay was more diffuse than from Calcasieu Lake. Much more of the shrimp harvested from Galveston Bay was channelled into the surrounding community than from Calcasieu Lake. The distribution of age,years as a commercial fisherman, and family involvement in fishing suggest that participation in Calcasieu Lake's and Galveston Bay's inshore fisheries have expanded concurrent with declining economies. While overall the Texas closure had little impact on either of the inshore fisheries, the Galveston Bay shrimpers experienced more of a direct impact on their livelihood than Calcasieu Lake shrimpers.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/9925/1/mfr5312.pdf

Nance, James M. and Garfield, Nina and Paredes, J. Anthony (1991) A Demographic Profile of Participants in Two Gulf of Mexico Inshore Shrimp Fisheries and Their Response to the Texas Closure. Marine Fisheries Review, 53(1), pp. 10-18.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/9925/

http://spo.nmfs.noaa.gov/mfr531/mfr5312.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Biology #Fisheries #Management
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed