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    Fish, Fishing, and Conservation

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    Donald J. Orth, Virginia Tech

    Copyright Year:

    Publisher: Virginia Tech Publishing

    Language: English

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    Attribution Attribution
    CC BY

    Table of Contents

    Dedication

    Copyright and License Information

    Introduction

    About the Author

    Acknowledgements

    Additional Resources and Links

    Instructor Resources

    1. Fish, Fishing, and Why They Matter

    2. Values Drive Fish Conservation

    3. Sensory Capabilities of Fish

    4. Ethical Reasoning and Conservation Planning

    5. Pain, Sentience, and Animal Welfare

    6. Public Aquariums and Their Role in Education, Science, and Conservation

    7. Gender and Fishing

    8. Angling and Conservation of Living Fishy Dinosaurs

    9. Fly Fishing’s Legacy for Conservation

    10. Recreational Fishing and Keep Fish Wet

    11. Integrating Fishers in the Management of Arapaima

    12. Conserving Tunas: The Most Commercially Valuable Fish on Earth

    13. Groupers and Spawning Aggregations

    14. Menhaden and Forage Fish Management

    15. Takeaways for Successful Fish Conservation

    Glossary

    Accessibility 

    Ancillary Material

    • Virginia Tech Publishing
    • About the Book

      Fish, Fishing, and Conservation is a 389-page, peer-reviewed open textbook intended for undergraduate students who are exploring majors in Fish & Wildlife. It is also relevant to a general audience or for use in courses which explore social and ethical aspects of fish, fishing and conservation.

      People, places, and approaches to fishing are as varied as the diverse fish fauna that exist on the planet. As conservation planners recognize the value of substantial engagement of stakeholders in decision making and ineffectiveness of rigid top-down management approaches, Fish, Fishing, and Conservation asserts that all peoples must play a role in conservation. Through case studies, engaging narrative and graphics, and exercises, the text explores major motivations for fishing and non-fishing related values, responsible fisheries practices, the rights of all people to decide how to manage and conserve fish, their habitats, and how they are utilized in the context of overfishing as a pressing global problem for which appropriate solutions are not easily found nor implemented. Introductory chapters examine fish, fishing, and why fish matter and examine the role of values in driving conservation initiatives. Fish and their unique sensory capabilities are described along with a review of recent studies to examine issues of pain, sentience, and learning in fishes living in a foreign, underwater world. The text incorporates these new findings in conservation and management leading readers to evaluate and adopt suitable approaches to ethical reasoning which consider the welfare needs of wild and cultured fishes. Later chapters focus on the role of gender in fishing, conservation organizations, recreational fishing, and a focus on specific fisheries that reveal the principles of conservation and management as they play out in major controversies. Additionally, the textbook contains audio recordings of professional profiles by Virginia Tech students. These are linked at the beginning of each end-of-chapter Professional Profile. Audio recordings are also available on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/06SnqAigflPXUgGNIHZxAX?si=Sljj3q9NRyOcclbmEE3npA

      Please let us know if you are reviewing or adopting this book https://bit.ly/fishandconservation_interest

      About the Contributors

      Author

      Donald J. Orth is the Thomas H. Jones Professor in the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

      Don attended Eastern Illinois University (BS) and Oklahoma State University (MS and PhD). He is a Life Member of the American Fisheries Society and a Certified Fisheries Professional. He is also a Fellow of the American Fisheries Society, the American Institute of Fisheries Research Biologists, and the Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Institute. In addition to over 150 popular writings, Don has published over 175 scientific publications on fishes, fisheries, and riverine management and has received numerous awards for his teaching and contributions to conservations and public outreach.

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