Symposium on the Effects of Fishing
Activities on Benthic Habitats: Linking
Geology, Biology, Socioeconomics, and Management
November
12-14, 2002
Tampa, FL
Preliminary Program and Registration Brochure
Scientific Sessions—November
12-14, 2002
Field Trips—November 11 and 15,
2002
Welcome Reception—November 11,
2002
Florida Aquarium Open House and
“Taste of the Tropics” Reception—November 12, 2002
http://walrus.wr.usgs.gov/bh2002/
Updated September 6, 2002
Symposium
on the Effects of Fishing Activities on Benthic Habitats:
Linking
Geology, Biology, Socioeconomics, and Management
Peter Barnes, U.S. Geological
Survey, Western Regional Coastal and Marine Geology Program
James Thomas, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service
Emory Anderson, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National
Marine Fisheries Service, Liaison to OAR/Sea Grant
James Balsiger, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National
Marine Fisheries Service, Regional Administrator, Alaska Region
Mary
Barber, Ecological Society of America, Director, Sustainable Biosphere
Initiative
Suzanne Bolton, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National
Marine Fisheries Service, Representative for NRC/OSB
Paul
Dayton, University of California-San Diego, Scripps Institute of Oceanography
Steve Gittings, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National
Ocean Service, Science Coordinator, National Marine Sanctuaries System
Suzette
Kimball, U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division, Chief
Biologist, Eastern Region
Justin
LeBlanc, National Fisheries Institute, Vice President for Government Relations
Gary Matlock, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National
Ocean Service, Director, National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science
Larry
Mayer, University of New Hampshire, Director of the Center for Coastal and
Ocean Mapping
Barbara Moore, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Oceanic
and Atmospheric Research, Director, National Undersea Research Program
Rod
Moore, West Coast Seafood Processors Association, Executive Director
Clarence
Pautzke, North Pacific Research Board, Executive Director
Ghassan
Rassam, American Fisheries Society, Executive Director
Michael Sissenwine, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
National Marine Fisheries Service, Director, Northeast Fisheries Science Center
Charles Adams, University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural
Science
Peter
Auster, University of Connecticut, National Undersea Research Center for the North Atlantic
& Great Lakes
Gary Brewer, U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division,
Leetown Science Center
Linda Deegan, Marine Biological Laboratory
Jon Dodrill, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Bureau of
Marine Fisheries Management
Dave Fluharty, University of Washington & North Pacific Fisheries
Management Council
Don Gordon, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Bedford Institute of
Oceanography
Jon Heifetz, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National
Marine Fisheries Service, Alaska Fisheries Science Center
Eric Powell, Rutgers University, Haskin Shellfish Research Laboratory
Page Valentine, U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Geology
Program, Woods Hole Field Center
Local
Co-chairs
Ellen Raabe, U.S.
Geological Survey, Center for Coastal & Regional Marine Studies - St.
Petersburg, Florida
Chris Smith, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National
Marine Fisheries Service, Southeast Regional Office - St. Petersburg, Florida
Sponsors and Participating Organizations
American Fisheries Society
Ecological Society of America
U.S.Geological Survey:
Biological
Resources Division
Geological
Division
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration:
National
Marine Fisheries Service
Office of Habitat Conservation
Office
of Science and Technology
Office
of Sustainable Fisheries
Office
of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research
National Sea Grant Program
National Undersea Research Program
National
Ocean Service
National Centers For Coastal Ocean Science
Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management
We wish
to thank the Homeland Foundation for their generous support of this symposium
and the publication of the proceedings.
Symposium on the
Effects of Fishing Activities on Benthic Habitats:
Linking Geology,
Biology, Socioeconomics, and Management
http://walrus.wr.usgs.gov/bh2002/
Symposium on Effects of Fishing Activities on Benthic Habitats:
Linking Geology, Biology, Socioeconomics, and Management
November 12-14, 2002 Tampa, FL
Dear Colleagues:
We are pleased to invite you to a Symposium on the Effects of Fishing Activities on Benthic Habitats: Linking Geology, Biology, Socioeconomics, and Management, convened by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in collaboration with the American Fisheries Society and the Ecological Society of America. The Symposium is designed to facilitate communication among scientists, managers, and fishing industry representatives who share a common interest in sustainable fisheries and healthy, diverse ecosystems. Most importantly, this convocation of leading experts in their fields is designed to address the pressing issues of fishing and habitat alteration that challenge managers, practitioners, and ocean scientists.
Fishery
resource managers face the challenge of ensuring sustainable fisheries and
maintaining healthy diverse ecosystems.
This challenge can be met by advancing the scientific knowledge available
to resource managers to evaluate and appropriately manage fishing activities
that affect benthic habitat. Scientific
studies in the fields of geology, biology, economics, and social sciences can
be integrated to provide information for making management decisions. In
response to this challenge, NOAA and USGS have been working together to develop
benthic habitat research initiatives focused on the effects of fishing gear and
the linkage between biological resources and the geology of benthic habitats. The Sustainable Fisheries Act of 1996
directed fishery managers to minimize to the extent practicable adverse effects
of fishing activities on habitat. In
addition, the National Research Council has recently completed a study,
“Effects of Trawling and Dredging on Seafloor Habitat.” Finally, many new technologies are available
for mapping as well as understanding physical and biologic linkages and change
to offshore benthic habitat.
The
Symposium will feature three days of plenary sessions covering management and
livelihood issues, characterizing and understanding natural change to bottom
habitats, understanding the ecological and economic effects of fishing, and
minimizing the adverse effects of fishing on benthic habitats. These topics will be introduced by one or
more invited speakers who will provide a national/international overview. Lead speaker presentations will be followed
by contributed oral presentations. An
extensive poster session with contributed posters will focus on Symposium themes. Posters offer an excellent opportunity for
extended informal discussion on cutting-edge results and ideas. Our
deliberations will culminate in a moderated panel of lively debaters with
different perspectives to make sense out of it all (i.e., lessens learned, and
where do we go from here). There are
also exciting Field Trip opportunities to complement the scientific
program. A Symposium Proceedings will
be published as a special peer-reviewed volume by the American Fisheries
Society.
The
Symposium will be held at the Doubletree Westshore Hotel in Tampa Bay, Florida,
November 12-14, 2002. We hope you will
examine the following Preliminary Program, join us in November, and contribute
to the success of the Symposium.
James P. Thomas Peter
W. Barnes
Co-Convener NOAA Co-Convener
USGS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Welcoming Reception
Florida Aquarium Open House and
Reception
Poster Browsing and Poster Pubs
Video Night
Information for Oral and Poster Presenters
Instructions to Proceedings Authors
Coffee Breaks and Lunches
Vegetarian Meal Policy
Roommate and Transportation Forum
Job Mart and Message Boards
Registration Fees
Payment Methods and Payment Policy
Cancellation Policy
Registration Refund Policy
Symposium Registration Hours
Reservations
Stellar Access
Tampa International Airport
Getting from the Airport to the
Hotel
Sponsoring and Participating Organizations
American Fisheries Society
Ecological Society of America
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
U.S. Geological Survey
Homeland Foundation
Things to do in Tampa (on your own
activities)
Weather and Attire
|
|
Monday November 11 |
Tuesday November 12 |
Wednesday November 13 |
Thursday November 14 |
Friday November 15 |
|
Registration |
Registration Open 8:00am –1:00pm and 4:00pm – 7:00pm |
Registration Open 7:00am – 7:00pm |
Registration Open 7:00am –
2:00pm and 4:00pm - 7:00pm |
Registration Open 7:00am –
9:00am and 11:00am –5:00pm |
Registration Open 7:00am –
9:00am |
|
Morning |
Field Trip #1 8:30am-noon |
Welcome and Introduction 8:00am Plenary Session 8:45am |
Plenary Session 8:00am |
Plenary Session 8:00am |
Field Trip #3 8:00am-5:30pm Field Trip #4 9:00am-4:00pm |
|
Noon |
Field Trip #2 12:00-6:00pm |
Lunch and Poster Browsing
12:45pm |
Lunch and Poster Browsing
12:45pm |
Lunch and Poster Browsing
12:00pm |
|
|
Afternoon |
|
Plenary Session 2:00pm |
Plenary Session 1:45pm |
Poster Session 1:00-2:00pm Moderated Panel and Discussions
2:00pm |
|
|
Evening |
Welcome Reception 6:30-8:00pm |
Poster Pub 5:00-7:00pm Open House and “Taste of the
Tropics” Reception at Florida Aquarium (buses depart at 7:15pm and return at
10:00pm) |
Poster Pub 5:00-7:00pm Video Night 8:00-9:30pm |
Adjourn 4:30pm |
|
Monday,
November 11, 2002
9:00am - noon FT #1 Fantasy Island/Alafia Bird
Sanctuary
noon - 6:00pm FT
#2 Charter Fishing with the Directors
6:30pm - 8:00pm Welcome Reception
Tuesday,
November 12, 2002
8:00am Welcome
Introduction: Earth Sciences, Biology, and
Economics in Managing Natural Resources
Session Chairs: Ghassan
Rassam, American Fisheries Society, and Mary Barber, Ecological Society of
America
8:15am Dr. William T. Hogarth*, Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
8:30am Dr. Charles G. Groat*, Director, U.S. Geological Survey
Theme I: Defining the Issue: Status, Management Needs, and Livelihoods
Session
Chairs: James Balsiger, National Marine
Fisheries Service, and Jon Dodrill, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission
8:45am Challenge of fisheries
management: balancing conservation and preservation of fish habitat—Clarence Pautzke*, North Pacific Research Board
9:15am Multiple objectives,
multiple players, multiple policies:
better management, or more complex paths to the same old thing?—Jake
Rice*, Fisheries
and Oceans Canada
9:45am Scientific advice to
manage benthic fisheries in Mexico: present status and perspectives—Francisco
Arreguín-Sánchez*,
Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas del IPN (Mexico)
10:15am break and poster browsing
10:45am Ecosystem consequences of
fishing effects on benthic habitat—Simon Jennings* and S.M.
Freeman, Centre for Environment,
Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Great Britain)
11:15am The results of the
National Research Council study on the effects of bottom trawling and dredging
on seafloor habitats—John Steele*1, and S.J.
Roberts2; 1Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 2National
Research Council
11:45am Destructive fishing
practices and evolution of the new fishery management paradigm—Elliott
Norse*, Marine
Conservation Biology Institute
12:15pm Approaches to EFH
management for Alaska groundfish fisheries that fulfill habitat management
objectives and maintain viable groundfish fisheries—John Gauvin*, Groundfish Forum, Inc.
12:45pm lunch and poster browsing (box lunches provided)
2:00pm Fishing communities,
science, and social impacts—Bonnie McCay*, Rutgers University
Theme II Setting
the Stage: Characterization and
Understanding Natural Change
Benthic Habitat Characterization and
Advanced Technologies and Their Applications
Session Chairs: Larry Mayer, University of New Hampshire,
and Page Valentine, U.S. Geological Survey
2:30pm Benthic habitat mapping
with advanced technologies and their application—James Gardner*1
and L.A. Mayer2; 1U.S. Geological Survey, 2University
of New Hampshire
3:00pm Fisheries habitat
studies: combining high-resolution physical and biological data—W. Waldo
Wakefield*, National
Marine Fisheries Service
3:30pm break and poster browsing
4:00pm Sea floor mapping on
the Scotian Shelf and the Gulf of Maine: implications for the management of
ocean resources—Richard Pickrill* and B.J. Todd, Geological Survey of Canada
4:15pm Seabed classification
with multibeam sonars for mapping benthic habitat—J.M. Preston1,
A.C. Christney1, William Collins*1, and B.D. Bornhold2;
1Quester Tangent Corporation, 2Coastal and Ocean
Resources, Inc.
4:30pm Fast-track methods for
assessing trawl impacts—Roger Coggan*2,4, C.J. Smith3,
R.J.A. Atkinson2, K.-N. Papadopoulou3, T.D.I. Stevenson2,
P.G. Moore2, and I.D. Tuck4; 1CEFAS Laboratory
(United Kingdom), 2University
Marine Biological Station (Scotland), 3Institute of Marine Biology
of Crete, 4Fisheries Research Service Marine Laboratory (Scotland)
4:45pm break
5:00-7:00pm Poster Pub and Raffle
7:15pm Buses depart for Florida Aquarium Open House and “Taste of the
Tropics” Reception
9:30pm Buses depart for the
Doubletree Westshore Hotel (return by 10:00pm)
Wednesday, November 13, 2002
Understanding Chronic and Event Driven Natural Change to Benthic
Habitats
Session
Chairs: Emory Anderson, National Marine
Fisheries Service, and Linda Deegan, Marine Biological Laboratory
8:00am Understanding chronic
and event driven natural change to benthic habitats (physical/biological): effect of sediment disturbance on sediment
community oxygen consumption (SCOC)—Elva Escobar-Briones*1,
G. Gracia1, and G.T. Rowe2; 1Instituto de
Ciencias del Mar y Limnologia, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, 2Texas
A&M University
8:30am Living with
change: response of the sea floor to
natural events—Mike Field*, U.S. Geological Survey
9:00am Understanding the
complex nature of fish-seagrass associations—Tara Anderson*, National Marine Fisheries Service
and U.S. Geological Survey
9:15am Analyzing time-lapse
photographs of the sea floor for changes in benthic community activity—Stace
Beaulieu*1, H. Singh1, and K.L. Smith2; 1Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution, 2Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Linking Fisheries and Supporting Ecosystems to Benthic Habitat
Character and Dynamics
Session
Chairs: Barbara Moore, Oceanic and
Atmospheric Research, and Gary Brewer, U.S. Geological Survey
9:30am Linking fisheries to
benthic habitats require observations at multiple scales—John Anderson*, Fisheries and Oceans Canada
10:00am break and poster browsing
10:15am Assessing dietary
specialism and food niche breadth of cod and whiting to identify possible
“essential fish habitats” in the Irish Sea, UK—Melanie Bergmann*1,
H. Hinz1, and S.I. Rogers2; 1University of
Wales-Bangor, 2 Centre for
Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Great Britain)
10:30am Decreasing habitat
disturbance by improving fish stock assessments: a new method of remote species identification and quantification—Daniel
Doolittle*, M.R. Patterson, Z-U. Rahman, and R. Mann, Virginia Institute of
Marine Science and the College of William and Mary
10:45am Delineating essential
juvenile red snapper habitat in the north central Gulf of Mexico—Will
Patterson*1, C.A. Wilson2, J.H. Cowan2, S.J.
Bentley2, and T.A. Henwood3; 1University of
South Alabama, 2Louisiana State University, 3National
Marine Fisheries Service
Theme III Understanding
the Ecological and Economic Effects of Fishing
Effects of Fishing: Assessment and Recovery
Session
Chairs: Steve Gittings, National Marine
Fisheries Service, and Jon Heifetz, National Marine Fisheries Service
11:00am Effects of fishing on
benthic habitats: assessment and
recovery—Jeremy Collie*1, J. Hermsen1,
and P. Valentine2; 1University of Rhode Island, 2U.S.
Geological Survey
11:30am Immediate effects of
experimental otter trawling on the benthic assemblage of Bear Island (fishery
protection zone), Barents Sea—Tina Kutti*1, T. Høisæter1
H.T. Rapp1, O.B. Humborstad2, S. Løkkerborg2,
and L. Nøttestad2; 1University of Bergen (Norway), 2Norway
Institute of Marine Research
11:45am Why fishing gear impact
studies don’t tell us what we need to know—Les Watling* and C. Skinder,
University of Maine
12:00pm Effects of chronic bottom trawling on the size structure of soft-bottom benthic invertebrates—Robert McConnaughey*, S.E. Syrjala, and C.B. Dew, National Marine Fisheries Service
12:15pm Effects of fishing on the
benthic habitat and fauna of seamounts on the Chatham Rise, New Zealand—Malcolm
Clark*, A.A. Rowden, and S. O’Shea, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric
Research (New Zealand)
12:30pm Spatial distribution and abundance of epifauna on adjacent soft-bottom
areas open and closed to bottom trawling in the Gulf of Alaska—Robert
Stone*, M.M. Masuda, and P.W. Malecha, National Marine Fisheries Service
12:45pm lunch and poster browsing (box lunches provided)
Comparison of Effects of Fishing with Effects of Natural Events and
Non-Fishing Anthropogenic Impacts on Benthic Habitat
Session
Chairs: Suzette Kimball, U.S.
Geological Survey, and Don Godon, Fisheries and Oceans Canada
1:45pm Comparison of effects
of fishing with effects of natural events and non-fishing anthropogenic impacts
on benthic habitats—Han Lindeboom*, NIOZ/ALTERRA (The Netherlands)
2:15pm Impacts of otter
trawling on the gravel habitat of Western Bank, Nova Scotia—Ellen
Kenchington*1, K.D. Gilkinson1, D.C. Gordon, Jr.1,
C. Bourbonnais1, K.G. Macisaac1, D.L. McKeown1,
G.B. Fader2, and W.P. Vass1; 1Fisheries and
Oceans Canada, 2Natural Resources Canada
2:30pm Did bottom trawling in
Bristol Bay’s red king crab broodstock refuge contribute to the collapse of
Alaska’s most valuable fishery?—C. Braxton Dew* and R.A. McConnaughey,
National Marine Fisheries Service
2:45pm Scaling of natural and
anthropogenic disturbance on the New York Bight shelf: implications for tilefish communities of the
shallow continental slope—Mark Sullivan*1, R.K. Cowen1,
K.W. Able2, and M.P. Fahay3; 1University of
Miami, 2Rutgers University, 3National Marine Fisheries
Service
3:00pm break and poster browsing
Extrapolation/Scaling Up of Local and Chronic Effects of Fishing and
Non-fishing Events to Regions and Time Scales Significant to Sustainable
Fishery Populations and Supporting Ecosystems/Habitats
Session Chairs:
Gary Matlock, National Ocean Service, and Eric Powell, Rutgers
University
3:30pm Spatial and temporal
scales of disturbance to the seafloor: a generalised framework for active
habitat management—Simon Thrush*, C. Lundquist, and J.E. Hewitt,
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (New Zealand)
4:00pm Spatial distribution of
fishing activity for principal commercial fishing gears used in the Northeast
region of the United States, 1995-2000—David Stevenson*, National Marine Fisheries Service
4:15pm Muddy thinking: ecosystem based management of marine
benthos—Chris Frid*, L.A. Robinson, and J. Bremner, University of Newcastle
upon Tyne (Great Britain)
4:30pm Structure and use of a
continental slope seascape: insights for the fishing industry and marine
resource managers—Alan Williams*, B. Barker, R.J. Kloser, N.J. Bax, and A.J.
Butler, CSIRO Marine Research (Australia)
4:45pm break
5:00-7:00pm Poster Pub and Raffle
8:00-9:30pm Video Night
Thursday, November 14, 2002
Social
and Economic Issues and Effects
Session
Chairs: Suzanne Bolton, National Marine
Fisheries Service, and Chuck Adams, University of Florida
8:00am
Impacts of marine
reserves: how fishermen behavior matters—James Wilen*, University of California, Davis
8:30am The role of human
values, perceptions, and ethics of the marine environment—Stephen Kellert*, Yale University
9:00am Place matters: spatial
tools for assessing the socioeconomic implications of marine resource
management measures on the Pacific coast—Astrid Scholz*, J. Mertens, C.
Steinbach, M. Bellman, and D. Sohm, Ecotrust
9:15am Occupational endurance
and contested resources: managing the
cultural and economic tensions of Lake Michigan’s commercial fishery—Michael
Chiarappa*, Western Michigan
University
Determinations of “To the Extent Practicable” Phrase in U.S. Law and Other Legal Issues Concerning Fishing Effects
Session
Chairs: Rod Moore, West Coast Seafood
Processors Association, and Dave Fluharty, University of Washington
9:30am The legal requirement
to address fishing effects on Essential Fish Habitat: thresholds, qualifiers,
and the burden of proof—Alison Rieser*, University of Maine School of Law
10:00am break and poster browsing
Theme IV Minimizing the Adverse Effects
of Fishing on Benthic Habitats: Lessons Learned
Alternate Fishing Techniques and
Policies: Lessons Learned
Session
Chairs: James Balsiger, National Marine
Fisheries Service, and Justin LeBlanc, National Fisheries Institute
10:30am Approaches to minimizing
impacts of fishing activities on benthic habitats—Michael Fogarty*, National Marine Fisheries Service
11:00am A paradigm for the
management of fish habitat based on vulnerability and availability, and an
assessment of the impact of fishers on habitat and habitat protection on
fishers—Joseph DeAlteris* and L.G. Skrobe, University of Rhode Island
11:15am Fishing for shellfish in
an internationally important nature reserve:
do current policies achieve their objectives?—Bruno Ens*1,
A.C. Smaal2, and J. De Vlas3; 1ALTERRA (The
Netherlands), 2Netherlands Institute for Fisheries Research, 3National
Institute for Coastal and Marine Management (The Netherlands)
11:30am Biological and
socio-economic implications of a limited access fishery management system—Robert
Blyth*1, M.J. Kaiser1, G. Edwards-Jones1, and
P.J.B. Hart2; 1University of Wales-Bangor, 2University
of Leicester (Great Britain)
11:45am The characteristics and
function of commercial fishing gears: how
these relate to their effects on seafloor habitats and the pursuit of ways to
minimize effects—Craig Rose*,
National Marine Fisheries Service
12:00pm lunch and poster browsing (box lunches provided)
1:00pm Poster Session
Theme V What
Next?: What have we Learned?—What more
do we need to know?—What should we act on right now?
2:00pm Moderated Panel and
Open Discussion
Moderator: Michael Sissenwine, Director, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries
Service
Panel:
John Gauvin, Groundfish Forum, Inc.; Elliott
Norse, Marine Conservation Biology Institute; Clarence
Pautzke, North Pacific Research Board; Nils
Stolpe, Garden State Seafood Association; and Simon
Thrush, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
The Symposium
will conclude with a powerful summary panel discussion where the different
points of view expressed during the symposium will be further evaluated, in the
context of the future, by representatives of industry, science, management, and
the environment. Frank participation by the symposium audience will be
encouraged. The outcome from this session will pull together the many different
suggestions and points of view presented during the discussion for future
consideration.
4:00pm Closing Remarks
4:30pm Adjourn
Friday, November 15, 2002
8:00am-5:30pm FT #3 NOAA Oil Spill Restoration/Maderia Beach Seafood Company/Fort DeSoto/USGS
Center for Coastal & Regional Marine Studies
9:00am-4:00pm FT #4 USGS Research at the Terra Ceia Aquatic Preserve
*Presenting
author
Invited
speakers bold
Benthic Habitat
Characterization and Advanced Technologies and Their Applications
Benthic habitat in the Gulf of Alaska: biological
communities, geological habitat, and fishing intensity—Jon Heifetz*1,
D.L. Courtney1, J.T. Fujioka1, H.G. Greene2,
P. Malecha1, and R.P. Stone1; 1National Marine
Fisheries Service, 2Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
A system for classification of habitats in estuarine
and marine environments: Florida perspective—Kevin Madley*, Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission
Regional habitat classification as applied to the
marine sublittoral of northeastern North America—Page Valentine*1,
B.R. Todd2, and V.E. Kostylev2; 1U.S.
Geological Survey, 2Geological Survey of Canada
Mapping and characterizing subtidal oyster reefs
using GIS and underwater videography—Ray Grizzle*, L.G. Ward, and J.R.
Adams, University of New Hampshire
Characterization of benthic habitat on eastern
Georges Bank—Valdimir Kostylev*1, B.J. Todd1, O.
Longva2, and P.C. Valentine3; 1Geological
Survey of Canada, 2Geological Survey of Norway, 3U.S.
Geological Survey
Determining seabed characteristics through
multi-beam echosounder system backscatter analysis and digital terrain models—Doug
Lockhart*, R.J. Pawlowski, and E. Saade, Thales GeoSolutions (Pacific), Inc.
Mapping rocky habitat using textural analysis
of sidescan sonar images—Guy Cochrane*, U.S. Geological Survey
The use of field calibrated side-scan acoustic
reflectance patterns to quantify and track alterations to benthic habitat
associated with Louisiana’s oyster industry—Charles Wilson*, H. Roberts, Y.
Allen, and J. Supan, Louisiana State University
Using laser technology to characterize substrate
morphology of lake trout spawning habitat in Northern Lake Michigan—Peter
Barnes*, G.W. Fleischer, J.V. Gardner, and K.M. Lee, U.S. Geological Survey
Benthic habitat characterization of the Gray’s Reef
National Marine Sanctuary using sidescan, multibeam and GIS techniques—Clark
Alexander*1, G. McFall2, T. Battista3, and R.
Bohne2; 1Skidaway Institute of Oceanography, 2Grays
Reef National Marine Sanctuary, 3National Ocean Service
Using lasers to investigate deepwater habitats in
the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary off central California—Churchill
Grimes*1, M. Yoklavich1, W. Wakefield1, and
H.G. Greene2; 1National Marine Fisheries Service, 2Moss
Landing Marine Laboratories
Characterization of coastal Great Lakes benthic
habitat—Stephen Lozano*1, M. Blouin2, and N. Wattrus3;
1NOAA Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, 2U.S. Geological
Survey, 3University of Minnesota
Sampling macrozoobenthos from zebra mussel
communities in Lake Erie—Gregory Kennedy*1, M.C. Fabrizio2,
M.A. Blouin1, J.F. Savino1; 1U.S. Geological
Survey, 2National Marine Fisheries Service
Quantitative measures of acoustic diversity to
support benthic habitat characterization—J.M. Preston1, A.C.
Christney1, William T. Collins*1, and R.A. McConnaughey2;
1Quester Tangent Corporation, 2National Marine Fisheries
Science Center
Mapping seagrass boundaries with waveform-resolving
lidar: a preliminary assessment—Tonya Clayton*1, J.C. Brock1,
and C.W. Wright2; 1U.S. Geological Survey, 2National
Aeronautics and Space Administration
An assessment of fish and invertebrate communities
along trans-Pacific cable lines: a pilot study with implications for marine
reserve planning—T.D. Hart* and S.S. Heppell, Oregon State University
Distribution of acoustic backscatter imagery from
NOAA hydrographic surveys—Jeffery Brown*, D.W. Pritchard, and G.T. Noll,
National Ocean Service
Fluorescence imaging laser line scan (FILLS) imagery
for high-resolution benthic habitat characterization—Michael Strand*, Naval
Surface Warfare Center
Quantitative seafloor habitat classification using
GIS terrain analysis: effects of data density, resolution, and scale—P.
Iampietro and Rikk Kvitek*, California State University Monterey Bay
usSEABED: towards unifying knowledge of geological
controls on benthic habitats—J.A. Reid*1, C.J. Jenkins2,
M.E. Field1, M. Zimmerman3, S.J. Williams1,
J.M. Currence1, C.E. Box1, and J.V. Gardner1; 1U.S.
Geological Survey, 2University of Colorado, 3National
Marine Fisheries Service
Understanding Chronic
and Event Driven Natural Change to Benthic Habitats
Fishing effects on habitat: the potential
consequences of removing such habitat engineers as red grouper (Epinephelus
morio)—Felicia Coleman*1, C.C. Koenig1, M.W.
Miller2, S.A. Heppell3, S.S. Heppell3, and K.
Scanlon4; 1Florida State University, 2National
Marine Fisheries Service, 3Oregon State University, 4U.S.
Geological Survey
Effects of ice gouging on community structure and
the abundance of Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis): disturbance
does not necessarily mean negative fisheries effects—Philip Hooge*, P.R.
Carlson, and G.R. Cochran, U.S. Geological Survey
Biodiversity changes in space and time in the Gulf
of Alaska: an ecosystem measure of fishing effects on habitat—Rebecca
Reuter* and S. Gaichas, National Marine Fisheries Service
Extensive iceberg reworking of lower Glacier Bay
sediments provides unexpected geohabitat—Paul Carlson*, P.N. Hooge, A.
Stevenson, G. Cochrane, and P. Dartnell, U.S. Geological Survey
Geologic development and longevity of continental
shelf mudbelt habitat during the Holocene in the Monterey Bay National Marine
Sanctuary, California—Eric Grossman*, M.E. Field, and S.L. Eittreim,
U.S. Geological Survey
Linking
Fisheries and Supporting Ecosystems to Benthic Habitat Character and Dynamics
Quantitative
ground-truthing of biological habitat
characteristics using video mosaic images—Randy Cutter*, L.A. Mayer, Y.
Rzhanov, and R. Grizzle, University of New Hampshire
Fish landings, discards and benthic material from
otter trawling in the western English Channel—Stephen Cotterell, University
of Plymouth (Great Britain)
Habitat associations of upper slope rockfishes (Sebastes
spp.) and co-occurring demersal fishes in Ascension Canyon, California—J.J.
Bizzarro1, Jeffrey Field*1, H.G. Greene1, R.N.
Lea2, and J. deMarignac1; 1Moss Landing Marine
Laboratories, 2California Department of Fish and Game
Small-scale analysis of subtidal fish guilds and
associated habitat characteristics along central California—Jeffery Field*1,
M.M. Yoklavich2, G.M. Cailliet1, S. Bros3, J.
deMarignac1, and R.N. Lea4; 1Moss Landing
Marine Laboratories, 2National Marine Fisheries Service, 3San
Jose State University, 4California Department of Fish and Game
Biological traits of the North Sea benthos: does fishing affect benthic ecosystem
function?—Julie Bremner*1, C.L.J. Frid1, and S.I.
Rogers2; 1University of New Castle upon Tyne (Great
Britain), 2Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science
(Great Britain)
Living substrates in Alaska: distribution, abundance
and species associations—Patrick Malecha*, R.P. Stone, and J. Heifetz,
National Marine Fisheries Service
Data sets relevant to identification of essential
fish habitat (EFH) on the Gulf of Mexico continental shelf and for estimation
of effects of shrimp trawling gear—Phil Caldwell* and P. Sheridan, National
Marine Fisheries Service
Geoacoustic and geological characterization of
juvenile red snapper habitat; Northern Gulf of Mexico Continental Shelf—Sam
Bentley*1, W.F. Patterson2, Y. Allen1, W.
Vienne1, and C. Wilson1; 1Louisiana State
University, 2Dauphin Island Sea Laboratory
Recognizing habitat modifications by fish in the
Gulf of Mexico—Kathryn Scanlon*1, F.C. Coleman2, and
C.C. Koenig2; 1U.S. Geological Survey, 2Florida
State University
Linking predator and prey species dynamics in
deep-water reefs of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico—Paul Thurman*1,
G. Dennis2, K. Sulak2, and R.S. McBride1; 1Florida
Marine Research Institute, 2U.S. Geological Survey
Effects of Fishing on the mid-Atlantic tilefish
habitat: restructuring a structured habitat—Vincent Guida*1, P.C.
Valentine2, and F. Almedia1; 1National Marine
Fisheries Service, 2U.S. Geological Survey
Habitat and species associations of fish, megafauna and
benthic infauna in the New York Bight apex—Sukwoo Chang*, J. Vitaliano, and
F. Steimle, National Marine Fisheries Service
Integration of acoustic seabed classification and
fish census data for determining appropriate boundaries of marine protected
areas—Arthur Gleason*1, A.-M. Eklund2, R.P. Reid1,
D.E. Harper2, D.B. McClellan2, J. Schull2; 1University
of Miami, 2National Marine Fisheries Service
The sensitivity of fish and
macro-epifauna to
habitat change: an analytical approach—Steven Freeman* and S.I. Rogers,
Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Great Britain)
Development of an electronic logbook to assess
shrimp-trawl catch, effort, and associated environmental data in areas fished
off Florida and Texas—Peter Rubec*, A. Jackson, C. Ashbaugh, and S.
Versaggi, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
Effects of
Fishing: Assessment and Recovery
Ecological consequences of lost habitat structure
for commercially significant flatfishes: habitat choice and vulnerability to predators—Allan
Stoner*, C.L. Ryer, and R.A. McConnaughey, National Marine Fisheries Service
Deep-sea trawling impacts on the benthic ecosystem
along the Northern European Continental Margin—J.D. Gage*1, J.M.
Roberts1, J. Humphrey2, and P.A. Lamont1; 1Scottish
Association for Marine Science, 2Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory
(Great Britain)
Effects of 135 years of oyster (Ostrea chilensis)
fishing on the benthic habitat, associated macrofaunal assemblages, and
sediments of Foveaux Strait, New Zealand—H.J. Cranfield*, K.P. Michael, G.
Carbines, D.P. Gordon, B. Manighetti, A. Dunn, and A.A. Rowden, National
Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (New Zealand)
Effect of lobster traps on seagrass beds of the
Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary (FKNMS): damage assessment and
evaluation of recovery—Amy Uhrin*1, M.S. Fonseca1, and
G.P. Didomenico2; 1National Ocean Service, 2Monroe
County Commercial Fisherman
The effect of different types of otter trawl
groundrope on benthic nutrient fluxes and sediment biogeochemistry—Costas
Dounas*1, J. Davies2, P. Hayes2, C.
Arvanitidis1, and P. Koulouri1; 1Institute of
Marine Biology of Crete (Greece), 2Fisheries Research Services
(United Kingdom)
Preliminary results on the effect of otter trawling on
hyberbenthic communities in Heraklion Bay (Eastern Mediterranean, Cretan Sea)—Panayota
Koulouri*1, C. Dounas1, and A. Eleftheriou2;
1Institute of Marine Biology of Crete (Greece), 2University
of Crete (Greece)
Effect of shrimp trawling on snow crab resource in
the Northwest Atlantic—Gerry Brothers*1 and J.J. Foster2;
1Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 2Aquaprojects, Inc
(Canada).
The impact of bottom fishing on early diagenetic
transformations and benthic nutrient exchange—Philip Percival*, C.L.J. Frid,
and R.C. Upstill-Goddard, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (Great Britain)
Reduction of species diversity in a cobble habitat
subject to long-term fishing activity—Les Watling* and A. Pugh, University
of Maine
Impacts of scallop dredging on marine bottom
complexity and juvenile fish habitat—Frédéric Hartog*1, P.
Archambault1, and L. Fortier2; 1Fisheries and
Oceans Canada, 2Univeristé Laval (Canada)
The impact of scallop dredging on the American
lobster (Homarus americanus) in the Baie des Chaleurs, Canada—Philippe
Archambault* and L. Gendron, Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Impacts to coral reef benthos from lobster trap gear
in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary—Mark Chiappone*1,
D.W. Swanson2, and S.L. Miller1; 1University
of North Carolina-Wilmington, 2University of Miami
Spatial distribution and benthic impacts from
hook-and-line fishing gear in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary—Mark
Chiappone*1, D.W. Swanson2, and S.L. Miller1; 1University
of North Carolina-Wilmington, 2University of Miami
Physical and biological effects of shrimp trawling
on soft sediment habitats in the Gulf of Maine—Anne Simpson* and L. Watling,
University of Maine
Impacts of mobile fishing gear on sponges and
gorgonian corals in the Gulf of Alaska—Linc Freese*, National Marine
Fisheries Service
Evidence of fisheries damage to deep-water
gorgonians in the Northeast Channel between Georges and Browns Banks, Nova
Scotia—Pal Mortenson*1, L. Buhl-Mortenson1, D.C.
Gordon, Jr.1, G.B. Fader2, D.M. McKeown1, and
D.G. Fenton1; 1Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 2Natural
Resources Canada
Trawl fishing disturbance and medium-term
recolonization dynamics: comparison between sandy and muddy habitats in the
Adriatic Sea (Northern Mediterranean Sea)—Fabio Pranovi*1, S.
Raicevich1, F. Da Ponte1, and O. Giovanardi2; 1Università
Ca’ Foscari (Italy), 2Istituto Centrale per la Ricerca Scientifica
Applicata la Mare (Italy)
Bottom trawling effects on cerianthid burrowing
anemone aggregations and Acadian redfish habitats in mud to muddy gravel seabeds
of the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary region, Gulf of Maine
(Northwest Atlantic)—Page Valentine*1, J.B. Lindholm2,3,
and P.J. Auster3; 1U.S. Geological Survey, 2Stellwagen
Bank National Marine Sanctuary, 3University of Connecticut
Analyzing the effects of trap fishing in coral reef
habitats: methods and preliminary results—Ronald Hill*1, P.F.
Sheridan1, R. S. Appeldoorn2, T.R. Matthews3,
and K.R. Uwate4; 1National Marine Fisheries Service, 2University
of Puerto Rico-Mayagüez, 3Florida Marine Research Institute, 4U.S.
Virgin Islands Department of Planning and Natural Resources
Short-term effects of the cessation of shrimp
trawling on Texas benthic habitat—Pete Sheridan*, National Marine Fisheries
Service
Ecological footprints of Scotian Shelf groundfish
fisheries—Kees Zwanenburg*, M. Showell, and S. Wilson, Bedford Institute of
Oceanography (Canada)
Changes in the benthic invertebrate assemblage
following the establishment of a protected area, the “plaice box”—Gerjan
Piet*, J. Craeymeersch, and A.D. Rijnsdorp, Netherlands Institute for Fisheries
Research
The impact of oyster dredging on blue cod in New
Zealand—Glen Carbines*, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
(New Zealand)
A comparison of habitat structure in fished and
un-fished, mobile and immobile sand habitats on Georges Bank (Northwest
Atlantic)—James Lindholm*1,2, P.J. Auster1, and P.
Valentine3; 1University of Connecticut, 2Stellwagen
Bank National Marine Sanctuary, 3U.S. Geological Survey
Effects of fishing on organic carbon of sand
habitats on Georges Bank—Vincent Guida*1, A. Paulson1,
P.C. Valentine2, and L. Arlen1; 1National
Marine Fisheries Service, 2U.S. Geological Survey
The effectiveness of marine protected areas on fish and
benthic fauna: how long does it take for benthic habitat to recover from
fishing disturbance?—Jason Link*1, F. Almedia1, R.
Reid1, P. Valentine2, L. Arlen1, V. Guida1,
D. Packer1, T. Noji1, and J. Vitaliano1; 1National
Marine Fisheries Service, 2U.S. Geological Survey
The effectiveness of marine protected areas on fish
and benthic fauna: the Georges Bank closed area I example—Robert Reid*1,
F. Almedia1, P. Valentine2, L. Arlen1, J.
Cross1, V. Guida1, J. Link1, D. McMillan1,
S. Muraski1, D. Packer1, J. Vitaliano1, and A.
Paulson1; 1National Marine Fisheries Service, 2U.S.
Geological Survey
The effectiveness of marine protected areas on fish
and benthic fauna: the Georges Bank closed area II example—Frank Almeida*1,
P. Valentine3, R. Reid1, L. Arlen1, P. Auster2,
J. Cross1, V. Guida1, J. Lindholm2, J. Link1,
D. Packer1, J. Vitaliano1, and A. Paulson1; 1National
Marine Fisheries Service, 2University of Connecticut, 3U.S.
Geological Survey
The theoretical and methodological basis of estimations
of the human-made influences (fishing and construction) on benthic habitats—Vladimir
Emelyanov*, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Community and life history divergence of colonial
hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from heavily trawled scallop grounds in the Bay
of Fundy, eastern Canada—Lea-Anne Henry*, Dalhousie University (Canada)
Comparison
of Effects of Fishing with Effects of Natural Events and Non-Fishing
Anthropogenic Impacts on Benthic Habitat
Impacts of hydraulic clam dredging on benthic
macrofaunal communities on Banquereau, a fishing bank off Nova Scotia—Kent
Gilkinson*1, D.C. Gordon, Jr.1, G.B. Fader2,
D.L. McKeown1, E.L.R. Kenchington1, D. Roddick1,
C. Bourbonnais1, K. Macisaac1, and W.P. Vass1;
1Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 2Natural Resources Canada
Summary of the Grand Banks otter trawling experiment
(1993-1995): effects on a sandy bottom habitat and community—Don Gordon,
Jr.*, K.D. Gilkinson, E.L.R. Kenchington, J. Prena, C. Bourbonnais, K.G.
Macisaac, D.L. McKeown, and W.P. Vass, Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Shrimp and crab trawling impacts on estuarine
soft-bottom organisms—Lawrence Cahoon*, M.H. Posey, W.H. Daniels, and T.D.
Alphin, University of North Carolina-Wilmington
Using sidescan sonar to assess the impact and
persistence of natural and anthropogenic disturbance to low-relief oyster
habitats in coastal Louisiana—Yvonne Allen*, C. Wilson, H. Roberts, and J.
Supan, Louisiana State University
Benthic perturbations from walrus foraging: are they
similar to trawling?—Chadwick Jay*1, L.C. Huff2, and
R.A. McConnaughey3; 1U.S. Geological Survey, 2University
of New Hampshire, 3National Marine Fisheries Service
Survey of fishing gear and fiber optics cable
impacts to benthic habitats in the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary—Mary
Sue Brancato* and C.E. Bowlby, Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary
Impacts of trawling and wind disturbance on water
column processes in the Pamlico River Estuary, North Carolina—Terry West*,
D.R. Corbett, L.M. Clough, M.W. Calfee, and J.E. Frank, East Carolina
University
Comparative evaluation of natural and trawling
sediment disturbance via short-lived radionuclies, in situ monitors and
remote sensing techniques in the Pamlico River Estuary, North Carolina—James
Frank*, D.R. Corbett, T.L. West, L.M. Clough, and M.W. Calfee, East Carolina
University
Controversy about trawling and Santa Maria Key’s
causeway effects on seagrass—Angel Quirós Espinosa*, M.E. Perdomo López, and
R. Arias Barreto, Centro de Estudios y Servicios Ambientales
Extrapolating extinctions and extirpations:
searching for the pristine state of the benthos—Leonie Robinson* and C.L.J.
Frid, University of Newcastle upon Tyne (Great Britain)
A before-after-control-impact study of the sea
scallop fishing grounds of Georges Bank—Kevin Stokesbury* and
B. Harris, University of Massachusetts
Fishing and environmental disturbance indicators in
a shrimp fishing ground in the Mexican central Pacific—Enrique
Godinez-Dominquez*1, J. Freire2, and G. González-Sansón3;
1Universidad de Guadalajara (Mexico), 2Universidad de A
Coruña (Spain), 3Universidad de la Habana (Cuba)
Impacts of commercial bottom trawling on the
sediment characteristics and benthic community of essential fish habitat on the
inner Bering Sea shelf—Eloise Brown*1, S. Hills1, and
M. Dommisse2; 1University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2Monash
University
Extrapolation/Scaling
Up of Local and Chronic Effects of Fishing and Non-fishing Events to Regions
and Time Scales Significant to Sustainable Fishery Populations and Supporting
Ecosystems/Habitats
Spatial distribution of fishing activity for
principal commercial fishing gears used in the Northeast region of the United
States, 1995-2000—David Stevenson*, National Marine Fisheries Service
The spatial extent and nature of mobile bottom fishing
methods within the New Zealand EEZ, 1989-90 to 1998-99—Susanjane Baird*,
N.W. Bagley, B.A. Wood, A. Dunn, and M.P Beentjes, National Institute of Water
and Atmospheric Research (New Zealand)
Deepwater trawl fisheries modify benthic community
structure in similar ways to fisheries in coastal systems—Martin Cryer*, B.
Harthill, and S. O’Shea, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
(New Zealand)
Fine-scale distribution of groundfish populations:
does habitat configuration and patchiness matter?—Tara Anderson1,2,
M.M. Yoklavich1, S. Eittreim2, R. Starr3, and
L. Snook4; 1National Marine Fisheries Service, 2U.S.
Geological Survey, 3California Sea Grant Extension Program, 4Moss
Landing Marine Laboratories
Detecting the effects of fishing on seabed community
diversity: importance of scale and sample size—Michel Kaiser*, University of
Wales-Bangor
Essential fish habitat (EFH) in Alaska: issues in
consistency and efficiency when using geographical information systems (GIS) to
evaluate effects to EFH—Rebecca Reuter*1, C.C. Coon2,
J.V. Olson1, and M. Eagleton1; 1National
Marine Fisheries Service, 2North Pacific Fisheries Management
Council
Spatial and temporal distributions of trawling
intensity off Alaska: connecting the small-scale issues to issues on an
ecosystem scale—Craig Rose* and E.M. Jorgensen, National Marine Fisheries
Service
A GIS routine for assessing designs that sample an
area of fish or lobster traps—Geoffrey Matthews*, R.L. Hill, and P.F.
Sheridan, National Marine Fisheries Service
Spatial and temporal patterns in trawling activity
in the Canadian Atlantic and Pacific—David Kulka*1 and D.A.
Pitcher2; 1Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 2Spatial
Metrics Atlantic (Canada)
Social and
Economic Issues and Effects
Tradeoffs associated with the use of closed areas to
conserve habitat: consideration of New England groundfish and sea scallop
fisheries—H.F. Upton* and J.G. Sutinen, University of Rhode Island
Building a database for benthic fisheries using
tourist income—Geoffrey Lane, Clearwater Marine Aquarium
Promoting environmental awareness and developing
conservation harvesting technology for the fishing industry—Gerry Brothers,
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Development of a West Coast cooperative research
program, working together towards better information—Jennifer Bloeser,
Pacific Marine Conservation Council
Alternate
Fishing Techniques and Policies:
Lessons Learned
Identification and evaluation of indicators for
environmental performance of European marine fisheries—Lars-Henrik Larsen*1,
A. Zenetos2, and N. Streftaris2; 1Akvaplan-niva,
The Polar Environmental Centre (Norway), 2National Centre for Marine
Research (Greece)
Reducing seabed contact of bottom trawls—Pingguo
He*, University of New Hampshire
Using ideal free distribution theory to identify
potential marine protected areas—Hilmar Hinz*1, M.J. Kaiser1,
M. Bergmann1, and S.I. Rogers2; 1University of
Wales-Bangor, 2Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture
Science (Great Britain)
Results of a workshop on the effects of fishing gear
on benthic habitats off the Northeastern United States—Louis Chiarella*1,
D.K. Stevenson1, C.D. Stephan1, R.N. Reid1,
J.E. McCarthy1, M.W. Pentony2, T.B. Hoff3,
C.D. Selberg4, and K.A. Johnson1; 1National
Marine Fisheries Service, 2New England Fishery Management Council, 3Mid-Atantic
Fishery Management Council, 4Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commission
Approach to evaluating fishing effects on EFH off
Alaska—David Witherell* and C. Coon, North Pacific Fishery Management
Council
Use of hydraulic clam dredges on benthic habitat off
the Northeastern United States—David Wallace*1 and T.B. Hoff2;
1Wallace and Associates, 2Mid-Atlantic Fisheries
Management Council
Developing a fisheries ecosystem plan for the North
Sea—Chris Frid*1, C.L. Scott1, M.F. Borges2,
N. Daan4, T.S. Gray1, J. Hatchard1, L. Hill2,
O.A.L. Paramor1, G.J. Piet4, S.A. Ragnarsson3,
W. Silvert2, and L. Taylor3; 1University of
Newcastle upon Tyne (Great Britain), 2Instituto Portugês de
Invesigação das Pescas e do Mar (Portugal), 3Marine Research
Institute (Iceland), 4Netherlands Institute for Fisheries Research
Florida Oculina Coral Banks: habitat, fish populations, restoration, and
enforcement—Christopher Koenig*1, A.N. Shepard2, J.
Reed3, R.G. Gilmore4, F.C. Coleman1, S. Brooke3,
J. Brusher5, M. Barnette5, A.W. David5, and K.
Scanlon6; 1Florida State University, 2University
of North Carolina-Wilmington, 3Harbor Branch Oceanographic
Institute, 4Dynamac Corporation, 5National Marine
Fisheries Service, 6U.S. Geological Survey
Monitoring changes in the fully protected zones of
the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary—Brian Keller, Florida Keys
National Marine Sanctuary
Changes in the epibenthos assemblages of the North
Sea following the establishment of a protected area, the “plaice box”—Johan
Craeymeersch* and G.J. Piet, Netherlands Institute for Fisheries Research
Rapid build-up of fish biomass, but still declining
coral reefs: why a marine fishery reserve designation is not enough for the
protection of reef epibenthic communities—Edwin Hernández-Delgado* and A.M.
Sabat, University of Puerto Rico
Decision framework for describing and identifying
EFH, mitigating fishing impacts and designating HAPC in Federal fishery
management plans—Graeme Parkes*, H.B. Lovett, and R.J. Trumble, MRAG
Americas, Inc.
The Ocean Habitat Protection Act: overdue protection for structurally complex seafloor habitats—Hannah Gillean*, Marine Conservation Biology Institute, Oceana
The path towards ecologically sustainable fisheries: a case study in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage area—Dorothea Huber, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (Australia)
* Presenting author
Field Trips will be offered on Monday, November 11, 2002, and Friday, November 15, 2002. Enrollment on all Field Trips is limited and advance registrations are required. Field Trip registration is open to all registered Symposium participants and their registered guests. There is a charge for Field Trips to cover transportation, activities, and beverages or lunch if applicable. Field Trip participants will be picked up at and returned to the Doubletree Westshore Hotel.
PLEASE NOTE: The
deadline for registration for Field Trips is Thursday, October 3, 2002. Updates on filled or cancelled Field Trips
will be posted on the website at http://walrus.wr.usgs.gov/bh2002/
under News & Updates.
Field Trip participants should take careful note of each trip’s departure date and time and the return date and time. It is your responsibility to be at the front door of the Doubletree Westshore Hotel in sufficient time to check in with your Trip Leader. If you miss your departure, we will be unable to arrange for you to join the trip en route and we will NOT refund your fee. Please do not register for more than one Field Trip in any given time slot. We cannot guarantee that Field Trip #1 will return in time for participants to join Field Trip #2.
Participation in Field Trips involves exposure to obvious
and not-so-obvious hazards. In
recognition of the risks, ESA requires that, prior to departure on the trip,
all Field Trip participants sign a Waiver of Liability acknowledging your
awareness of these risks and your physical ability to participate in a Field
Trip. A Field Trip Waiver Form will be
sent to you approximately one month before the Symposium. A Waiver Form will also be posted on the
Symposium website. Please fill out the
form and bring it with you to the Symposium.
You should give your completed and signed form to the Trip Leader before
getting on the bus or van. If we do not
receive a signed Waiver Form from you, you will NOT be permitted to participate
in the Field Trip.
FT #1 Fantasy Island/Alafia Bird Sanctuary
Monday,
November 11, 2002 8:30am – 12:00pm
Field
Trip Leaders: Ilze Berzins and Becky Clayton,
Florida Aquarium; Richard Paul, Florida Coastal Islands
Sanctuaries
Tickets
for registrants or guests – $30
Minimum: 25 Maximum:
38
Enjoy a two-hour tour of Tampa Bay aboard the Florida Aquarium's boat "The Bay Spirit." The trip includes visits to two important sites in Tampa Bay: Fantasy Island and the Alafia Bird Sanctuary.
The
Florida Aquarium, in cooperation with a number of environmental agencies,
non-profit organizations, and corporations has completed the first phase of a
project to restore and enhance a three-acre man-made spoil island in Tampa Bay,
now called Fantasy Island. The island will be the center for ongoing
environmental education programs for school students and the general public
when complete. Key initiatives include: 1) removing exotic species
and replacing them with native habitats representative of the Bay; 2) building
a dock to accommodate "The Bay Spirit" and a covered classroom to
conduct ongoing education programs; 3) constructing nature trails throughout
the island; 4) producing and installing graphics, signage, and educational
kiosks throughout the restored site; and 5) performing on-going research
studies related to the restoration processes.
Alafia Bank Sanctuary (Bird Island to the east; Sunken Island to the west) is located in Hillsborough Bay at the mouth of the Alafia River. These two man-made islands were formed from spoil material when a channel that connects the main Tampa shipping channel to the Alafia River was dredged in the late 1920s. The islands were immediately important as bird nesting sites for gulls, terns, and skimmers. As shrubs and trees replaced low-lying vegetation, nesting herons, egrets, ibis, and later pelicans moved from the historic nesting site at Green Key. Today the islands are owned by Cargill Fertilizer, Inc., and leased to the Audubon Society for operation as a sanctuary. Each year, up to 18,000 nesting pairs of 16 to 20 species of birds nest on the Alafia Bank Sanctuary, making it one of the largest colonies in Florida and one of the most diverse colonies in the continental United States. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission has listed Alafia Bank as the most important colony in the State, due to its size (number of birds nesting), longevity of nesting activity, and species diversity.
A 12-acre
"Alafia Extension" was added to the west end of Sunken Island in
1977, using material from a nearby dredging project. Planted with smooth
cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) and
now matured to tall mangroves with tidal pools, sand and mud flats, and even
small creeks and salt barrens, the extension provides safe nesting, feeding,
and loafing habitats for breeding and migratory birds.
Alafia
Bank is one of the key sites for nesting, migrant, and wintering birds in Tampa
Bay. Protected by the Audubon Society
since the 1930s, the two islands are home to a colony of 7,000-150,00 breeding
pairs of 16 species, including brown pelican, double-crested cormorant, great
blue heron, great egret, snowy egret, little blue heron, tricolored heron,
reddish egret, cattle egret, green heron, black-crowned night-heron,
yellow-crowned night-heron, white ibis, glossy ibis, roseate spoonbill, and
American oystercatcher. Island sand
bars are used by large numbers of seasonal and winter visitors, including white
pelicans, black-necked stilts, American avocets, red knots, short-billed
dowitchers, and a number of other shorebirds, gulls and terns. While no birds
will be nesting in November, participants can expect to see a wide variety of
species including most of those mentioned here.
Bus
transportation from the Doubletree Westshore Hotel to the Florida Aquarium's
dock and beverages will be provided.
FT #2 Charter Fishing with the Directors
Monday,
November 11, 2002 12:00noon-6:00pm
Field
Trip Leaders: Chris Smith and Jim Thomas, National Marine Fisheries Service
Tickets
for registrants or guests – $55
Minimum: 26 Maximum:
50
Join National Marine Fisheries
Service Director Bill Hogarth and USGS Director Chip Groat, along with Rollie
Schmitten (Director, NOAA Fisheries Office Habitat Conservation), Jack Dunnigan
(Director, NOAA Fisheries Office Sustainable Fisheries), and Roy Crabtree
(Director, Division of Marine Fisheries, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission) for a half-day of fishing along the offshore reefs in the Gulf of
Mexico on the Double Eagle III. The
Double Eagle III is equipped with the latest fishing and safety technology.
Onboard amenities include clean restrooms and a galley that offers a variety of
lunch and beverage items.
Bus transportation from the
Doubletree Westshore Hotel to the Clearwater marina will be provided. Snacks
and lunches can be purchased on the Double Eagle III. The bus will
return to the Doubletree Westshore Hotel in time for the Welcome Reception.
FT #3 NOAA Oil Spill Restoration/Maderia Beach Seafood Company/Fort
DeSoto/USGS Center for Coastal & Regional Marine Studies
Friday,
November 15, 2002 8:00am - 5:30pm
Field Trip Leaders: John Iliff, the coordinator of the NOAA Fisheries
Southeast Restoration Center Office; Bobby Spaeth, Madeira Beach Seafood
Company, and Dennis Krohn, USGS Center for Coastal & Regional Marine
Studies
Tickets
for registrants or guests – $35
Minimum:
10 Maximum: 40
NOAA Oil
Spill Restoration Projects—On August 10, 1993, an outbound freighter collided
with two inbound barges laden with petroleum products near the entrance to
Tampa Bay. One of the barges caught on
fire upon impact and burned for 18 hours.
During that period, approximately 32,000 gallons of jet fuel, diesel,
and gasoline and nearly 330,000 gallons of heavy fuel oil spilled from the
barges. State and federal officials have settled with the responsible parties
on a plan to restore injured natural resources to compensate the public for
lost recreational use of beaches and natural resources. Under the agreement,
the responsible parties are paying over $8 million to resolve government
claims, including the costs of cleanup, damage assessment, and natural
resources restoration. More than 25
restoration projects have been completed or initiated as part of that
settlement. This trip includes visits
to at least three of those project sites: 1) the Cross Bayou site where the
responsible party was required to restore nearly 11 acres of degraded mangrove
habitat; 2) the War Veterans Memorial Park at Bay Pines where Pinellas County
is using $300,000 to construct an oyster reef; and 3) a site in Madeira Beach
where $400,000 is being used to develop a shoreline nature park. Participants will also pass several other
sites included in the settlement on the way to Fort DeSoto Park. Trip leaders will point these out and stops
may be included if time permits.
Madeira
Beach Seafood Company—See working fishing boats that are primarily outfitted
with longline and bandit gear for working in the Gulf of Mexico reef fish
fishery. Interpreters will be on hand
to explain the fishing process and the handling of the catch from the time it
is caught until it is distributed.
Fort
DeSoto Park—Enjoy lunch in the largest park within the Pinellas County
Park System. This park consists of 900 acres made up of five interconnected
islands. First opened on December 21,
1962, this park has entertained over 62,000,000 visitors. It was dedicated May 11, 1963, in perpetuity
as a public park. The battery of
12-inch mortars, located at the fort for which the park was named, was listed
in the National Register of Historic Places on February 7, 1978. Adding to the historical interest at Fort
DeSoto, two British breech-loading, rapid-fire cannons of 1890 vintage were
installed in March 1982. A stroll along
the one-mile nature trail provides a glimpse of some the native fauna and
flora. Participants may relax in the
sunshine on one of the park’s two beaches that are consistently rated among the
top ten in the nation. More information
on Fort DeSoto Park is available on their website at http://www.pinellascounty.org/park/fort_de_soto_park.htm.
USGS
Center for Coastal & Regional Marine Studies—This
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Research Center in St. Petersburg houses a myriad
of research on coastal and marine geology and the South Florida ecosystem. Research activities include: coral mortality and African dust; satellite
imagery and remote sensing; coastal assessment of shoreline change; submerged
and subsurface characterization; coastal hazards; fish ecology; and
sedimentation, sea-level rise, and circulation in Florida Bay. The tour will
highlight many of these research projects and the facilities and technologies
being used. For more information see: http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/.
Bus
transportation will depart from and return to the Doubletree Westshore
Hotel. Box lunches and beverages will
be provided.
FT #4 USGS Research at the Terra Ceia Aquatic
Preserve
Friday,
November 15, 2002 9:00am - 4:00pm
Field Trip Leaders: Kim Yates and Terry Edgar, USGS
Tickets for
registrants or guests – $85
Minimum: 25 Maximum:
42
Enjoy a relaxing boat ride in Tampa Bay to Bishop Harbor
aboard the comfortable John’s Pass Express. Get “hands on” and “wading wet” experience with U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS) Research at Terra Ceia Bay Aquatic Preserve.
Successful management of our nation’s coastal resources
requires an understanding of how natural and anthropogenic changes have
affected coastal ecosystems in the past, and how these changes will continue to
affect these resources in the future. The Tampa Bay Study uses an integrated
science approach for examining the interrelations between geological,
biological, chemical, and hydrological components of estuarine systems. The
multiple USGS disciplines are working together with other federal, state, and
local partners on this project. For
more information, please visit the project website at http://gulfsci.usgs.gov/tampabay/index.html.
Participants will visit research activities and discuss
with researchers, the different biological, chemical and geological aspects of
the Tampa Bay study along the coast in the shallow waters of the Terra Ceia
Preserve, which has a history of agricultural use. Tidal channels provide year-round
habitat for resident fishes as well as nursery habitat for transient fishes
that are spawned offshore (these include anchovies, silversides, and
menhaden—all schooling species—as well as small juveniles of mullet,
sheepshead, and spot). A key element of
the study involves measuring productivity and nutrient cycling of ecosystem
species including benthic communities using geochemical and incubation chamber
technology (SHARQ) in seagrass habitat.
Participants will hear from the Preserve Manager about the aquatic and
benthic habitats. In addition, we will
see demonstrations on wetland and nursery configuration, alterations, and
history; mangrove vegetation and species utilization; water character and
quality; and wetland, coastal, and seagrass fish species linkages.
Bus transportation from the Doubletree Westshore Hotel to
the boat dock at Cockroach Bay, lunches, and beverages will be provided. Come prepared to get wet! Participants should dress appropriately for wading in knee-deep water, including old
tennis shoes or diving boots for water walking. Bringing a towel is recommended.
Welcome
Reception
Monday, November 11, 2002,
6:30-8:00pm
Warm-up for an
exciting week at the Symposium Welcome Reception. Meet your friends and find out
who else is attending. This event offers a great opportunity to make those
important personal links between Geology, Biology, Socioeconomics, and
Management. Enjoy a delightful display of hors d’oeuvres and hosted beer, wine,
and soft drinks poolside at the Doubletree Westshore Hotel.
Florida Aquarium
Open House and “Taste of the Tropics” Reception
Tuesday, November 12, 2002,
7:15-9:30pm
During this
special event, you may socialize and stroll through the award-winning exhibits of
the Florida Aquarium. The Florida Aquarium is a world-class facility located on
the downtown Tampa waterfront channel. The Aquarium features over 10,000 live
plants and animals in four “environmental” galleries: Wetlands (a Mangrove
ecosystem), Bays and Beaches, Coral Reefs, and Offshore (Underwater
ecosystems). Your evening will start with a tour of the Galleries while
sampling “Floribbean” fare and grooving to the lively beat of steel drums.
Enjoy a buffet of the wonderful fruits, vegetables, seafood and cuisine from
Florida, the Islands, and Cuba. Cash Bars will be available to purchase the
libation of your choice. Bus transportation will be provided between the
Doubletree Westshore Hotel and the Florida Aquarium. Buses will depart the
Doubletree Westshore Hotel for the Florida Aquarium at 7:15pm and will depart
from the Florida Aquarium at 9:30pm to return to the hotel by 10:00pm.
Poster Browsing
and Poster Pubs
The over 100 posters being presented on the latest geological, biological, and socioeconomic
research and management approaches contain the core of contributed materials to
the Symposium. The poster sessions will
allow participants to see and discuss the full breadth and depth of current
research and knowledge on Symposium themes.
All posters will be available for viewing from 7:00am to 7:00pm each
day. Coffee breaks and lunches will be
served near the poster rooms to allow for casual viewing during the day.
On Tuesday and Wednesday evenings
between 5:00pm and 7:00pm, join your colleagues for informative, yet informal,
Poster Pubs. These Poster Pubs will
take place without competition from other sessions. Discuss state-of-the-art
science and management with the authors.
Enjoy scrumptious hors d’oeuvres and a Cash Bar. Take a chance at winning a rod and reel,
fishing CD, or other door prizes. (must
be present to win!) Rods and
fishing CDs have been donated by the National Marine Fisheries Service Office
of Recreational Fishing.
Video Night
Wednesday,
November 13, 2002, 8:00-9:30pm
Here's a chance to showcase the
video footage and still photos (slides or overheads) you've collected during
your research and management activities that illustrate the major themes of the
Symposium. We're looking for short clips (5 to 10 minutes) of video of benthic
habitats, benthic communities, impacts of fishing gear, fishing gear in
operation, and innovative approaches. If you are interested in sharing your
video or still photos with other Symposium participants, please send by
Thursday, October 3, 2002, to benthic@esa.org
the following information:
Churchill Grimes, Video Night Chair, will organize
the submissions into an exciting night of clips and discussion.
Don't have a video to share? Come
watch your colleagues' videos and share in the discussion and networking
opportunities. Popcorn and a cash bar will be provided! While there is no charge for this
activity, participants are asked to pre-register to ensure that adequate
preparations are made. Please indicate on the Symposium Registration
Form (Section G) if you plan to attend.
INFORMATION
FOR ORAL AND POSTER PRESENTERS
Oral
Presentations
You will be given a TOTAL of 15 minutes for your presentation;
this should include approximately 2 to 3 minutes for introduction and questions
at the end of your talk. Due to the
number of presentations, it is imperative that you stay within your allotted
time. The Session Chair will give you a
warning as you approach the end of your allotted time and stop you when you’ve
reached your limit in order to keep the Symposium on schedule. In fairness to others, we ask and expect
that you will adhere to these rules.
The following equipment will be available for your use: an LCD projector with computer and remote control, a slide projector with remote control, an overhead projector, and a screen. If you choose to use the LCD projector, you should bring your presentation on floppy disk or CD. We also urge you to bring standard 35mm slides or overheads as backup for any computer-based presentation. Please remember to allow time in your presentation to open your PowerPoint file. There will be a volunteer projectionist to assist with projection. Please make certain your slides and overheads can be easily read from the back of a room seating approximately 250 people. Lettering on visual materials should be at least 16 point. For maximum visibility, use large block lettering and colors of high contrast.
PLEASE BRING YOUR
PRESENTATION CD OR SLIDES TO THE A/V COORDINATOR THE BREAK BEFORE YOUR
PRESENTATION. PLEASE MAKE SURE TO MARK
YOUR PRESENTATION WITH YOUR NAME AND PRESENTATION TIME.
Poster
Presentations
All posters will be available for viewing throughout the entirety of the Symposium. You will be asked to formally present your poster at a designated time during the Poster Pubs on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings between 5:00pm and 7:00pm or the Poster Session on Thursday afternoon between 1:00pm and 2:00pm. The schedule of Poster Presentations is:
Tuesday, November 12, 2002 5:00-6:00pm
Benthic Habitat Characterization and Advanced Technologies and Their Applications
Tuesday, November 12, 2002 6:00-7:00pm
Understanding Chronic and Event Driven Natural Change to Benthic Habitats
Linking Fisheries and Supporting Ecosystems to Benthic Habitat Character and Dynamics
Wednesday, November 13, 2002 5:00-6:00pm
Effects of Fishing: Assessment and Recovery
Wednesday, November 13, 2002 6:00-7:00pm
Comparison of Effects of Fishing with Effects of Natural Events and Non-Fishing
Anthropogenic Impacts on Benthic Habitat
Extrapolation/Scaling Up of Local and Chronic Effects...
Thursday, November 14, 2002 1:00-2:00pm
Social and Economic Issues and Effects
Alternate Fishing Techniques and Policies: Lessons Learned
Breaks and lunches also will be served in
the poster rooms to encourage casual viewing during these times.
Each poster board will be
numbered. In the final Program, find your poster number and attach your poster
to the correctly numbered board. Posters
should remain on display during the entirety of the Symposium. Posters can be put up between 7:00am and
8:00am on Tuesday, November 12, 2002, and should be taken down by 4:30pm on
Thursday, November 14, 2002. Any
posters left up after the deadline for removal will be taken down. We cannot guarantee safety or storage space
for posters left on poster boards after the deadline for removal.
The display area on each poster
board is 40”h x 90”w and poster boards are placed on legs. Each poster board
will accommodate one poster on each side.
Due to the number of posters being presented, each poster presentation
is limited to one side of a poster board. The poster board is made of
bulletin-board material, appropriate for push-pins or thumb-tacks. While a limited
number of push-pins will be provided, you are advised to bring your own. You
may also use velcro dots or strips to affix your poster. You may NOT use
staples, glue, paste, or nails to attach your poster to the poster board. In addition, ESA will NOT provide
equipment or electricity for use of projection or computer equipment involved
with a poster presentation. The information in the banner heading across the
top of the poster should be exactly the same as the abstract in the program,
(e.g., authors, institutions and title). Text should be large enough to be read
from approximately 10 feet away. Label each section clearly, in letters large
enough to read from 5 to 8 feet away.
General text on the poster should be readable from a minimum of 5 feet
away as well.
Symposium
participants will receive the Official Program and Abstract Volume at the
Symposium. This publication will
include abstracts for all oral and poster presentations. A special peer-reviewed volume to be
published by the American Fisheries Society will be the important legacy of the
meeting for researchers and managers.
All Symposium participants will receive the Symposium Proceedings in
2003.
Instructions to
Proceedings Authors
All oral and poster presenters
are strongly encouraged to submit a manuscript or research note to be included
in the Symposium Proceedings. To have your paper included in the Symposium
Proceedings, your full-length manuscript or research note based on your
presentation will be due AT THE TIME of the Symposium.
(A final version will be due no later than
December 15, 2002.) These manuscripts
will be delivered to the American Fisheries Society for review, acceptance, and
editing for the Symposium Proceedings volume. Please also include the names,
mailing addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses of three potential
reviewers. Author guidelines for manuscripts are available at http://www.fisheries.org/publications/catbooks/authorguide.pdf
or by contacting dlehman@fisheries.org.
At the Symposium, you should be prepared to submit:
·
two double-spaced hard copies of the manuscript/research
note;
·
original camera-ready art (accompanied by digital files, if
available);
·
a disk copy of the manuscript/research note (and figures,
if possible);
·
completed manuscript submission checklist (see Author
guidelines at URL above);
·
the names, mailing addresses, phone numbers and email
addresses of three potential reviewers; and
·
a completed Transfer of Copyright Form (see http://www.fisheries.org/publications/catalog/authresources.htm).
Coffee
Breaks and Lunches
Morning and afternoon
coffee breaks are complimentary and will be served in the Lake Forest and
Banyon Ballrooms where posters will also be available for casual viewing. Box lunches are included in the registration
fee and will be served in the Woodlands Foyer.
Poster viewing is also encouraged during the lunch break.
Vegetarian Meal
Policy
A vegetarian option (meatless) will be available for lunches, receptions,
and box lunches for Field Trips where lunch is provided. Please indicate your
preference for vegetarian (meatless) meals in Section C of the Symposium
Registration Form. We are unable to offer meals specifically designed for
vegans or those with food allergies.
Participants preferring vegan, lactos-free, or gluten-free foods are
advised to arrange for their own food independently.
Roommate
and Transportation Forum
The Symposium Roommate and
Transportation Forum is an electronic bulletin board designed to assist you
with identifying and getting in touch with potential roommates to share lodging
in or to arrange rides to or from Tampa Bay. The Roommate and Transportation
Forum is located at http://www.esa.org/benthic/forum/.
Whatever you post is completely your own responsibility. The Symposium
organizers cannot guarantee that you will locate roommates or rides using the
Forum, nor are the organizers or any of the participating organizations liable
for any consequences if you seek roommates or traveling partners using the
Forum. Participants planning to share a
room are advised to try to find a roommate in advance of making lodging
reservations.
Job Mart
and Message Boards
Employment and research
vacancies can be posted on the “Job Mart” bulletin board located in the
Woodlands Foyer. Messages for other
Symposium participants may be posted on the “Message Board,” also located in
the Woodlands Foyer.
The Ecological
Society of America will serve as the Registrar for the Symposium.
Registration for the
Symposium is available either online, by fax, or by mail.
§
To register online,
please click on the link to the secure electronic version of the Symposium
Registration Form on the Symposium website at http://www.esa.org/benthic/registration.htm. Please do NOT mail or fax a printed copy of
the Symposium Registration Form if you register online.
§
To register by fax,
please complete the hardcopy version of the Symposium Registration Form
included in this Preliminary Program or download and complete the printable PDF
version of the Symposium Registration Form using the link posted on the
Symposium website at http://www.esa.org/benthic/registration.htm. Fax the completed form to 202-833-8775.
§
To register by mail,
please complete the hardcopy version of the Symposium Registration Form
included in this Preliminary Program or download and complete the printable PDF
version of the Symposium Registration Form using the link posted on the
Symposium website at http://www.esa.org/benthic/registration.htm. Mail the completed form to:
Symposium on Effects of Fishing
Activities on Benthic Habitats
Attn:
Registration
c/o ESA
Department 0666
Washington, DC 20073 USA
Full payment of
registration fees must accompany the Symposium Registration Form regardless of
method of submission. Refer to the
Payment Method and Payment Policy Section below for detailed information about
payment options. Registration
processing can take up to 30 days. Once
completed, a Symposium Confirmation Notice will be sent to the registrant by
email or mail.
All Symposium
Registration Forms are automatically stamped with the day, date, and time of
receipt. Your Symposium Registration
Form must be received NO LATER THAN 5:00pm EASTERN DAYLIGHT TIME on the date
specified for each registration deadline (i.e., Early Bird or Standard
registration) or the registrant will be charged at the next registration fee
level.
Registration Fees
Standard (must be
received by 5pm EDT on October 24, 2002) $350US
Late/On-Site
(registrations received after 5:01pm EDT October 24,
2002 and on-site registrations) $390US
One-Day—Tuesday,
November 12, 2002 $250US
One-Day—Wednesday or
Thursday, November 13 or 14, 2002 $200US
Guest Registration $ 55US
Registration Fees (Standard and Late/On-Site)
cover to access to all scientific sessions, the Welcome Reception on Monday
evening, the Open House and “Taste of the Tropics” Reception with light buffet
at the Florida Aquarium on Tuesday evening, coffee breaks and box lunches on
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, and Poster Pub receptions on Tuesday and
Wednesday evening. In addition, the fee includes the Symposium Program and
Abstracts with abstracts of the oral and poster presentations and a copy of the
post-Symposium Proceedings volume, as well as a name badge and Symposium
souvenir. Field Trip participation involves additional costs ranging from $30
to $85.
One-Day Registration Fees cover access to all Symposium
activities on the day of registration, including the Plenary Session and Poster
Pub. Tuesday One-Day Registrants may
attend the Open House and “Taste of the Tropics” Reception at the Florida
Aquarium. One-Day registrants will also
receive the Symposium Program and Abstracts with abstracts of the oral and
poster presentations and a copy of the post-Symposium Proceedings volume, as
well as a name badge and Symposium souvenir.
The
Guest Registration Fee entitles the
guest of a Symposium registrant to attend the Monday Welcome Reception and the
Tuesday Open House and “Taste of the Tropics” Reception at the Florida Aquarium
ONLY. Each registered guest will also
receive a name badge and Symposium souvenir.
Press Registration includes access to all Symposium sessions and is available at no charge to all members of the press who can demonstrate the appropriate credentials. This includes reporters with a recognized press card or current membership in the National Association of Science Writers, the Canadian Science Writers Association, the International Science Writers Association, or the Society of Environmental Journalists. Press Registration is also available for Public Information Officers who can demonstrate membership in one of the above professional organizations. Press Registration is NOT available for editors of peer-reviewed journals, ad sales representatives, publishers, program officers, or marketing professionals. Members of the press who wish to attend the Monday Welcome Reception and the Tuesday Open House and “Taste of the Tropics” Reception at the Florida Aquarium must register and pay the Guest Registration Fee. In addition, members of the press interested in attending Field Trips must register for these and pay the associated fees. For more information or to register as a member of the press, please contact Annie Drinkard, ESA Public Affairs Officer, by telephone at 202-833-8773 or by email at annie@esa.org.
Payment Method and Payment Policy
All registration
fees must be paid in full at the time the Symposium Registration Form is submitted. Please include requests for Field Trip
participation in your initial symposium registration as well. To ensure advance registration, your
Symposium Registration Form must be received no later than Thursday, October
24, 2002. After that date, registration
for the Symposium must be submitted onsite.
If registering
online or by fax, payment of registration fees must be made by credit card
(MasterCard or VISA only). If
registering by mail, payment of registration fees may be made by credit card (MasterCard
or VISA only) or check (personal, business, or travelers check, money order, or
overseas wire transfer. We are unable
to accept American Express, Discover, or Diners Club card payments and we will
NOT accepted Purchase Orders of any type in place of payment. (For foreign remitters only, drafts on U.S.
Banks and U.S. Postal Orders will also be accepted if approved in advance by
the Symposium Registrar.) All checks and
money orders should be in payable in U.S. Dollars and to “The Ecological Society
of America.” Please DO NOT MIAL CASH.
In the event that
the credit card information provided for payment is invalid, the card is
declined, a check is returned for insufficient funds, the registrant will be
contacted by the Registrar for alternate payment and a $25 Processing Fee will
be assessed.
Cancellation Policy
All cancellations of
registration for the Symposium or for individual Field Trips MUST BE SUBMITTED
IN WRITING and MUST BE RECEIVED BY FAX OR POSTMARKED NO LATER THAN Thursday,
October 3, 2002. Cancellations by
telephone, voice mail, or email will NOT be accepted. Fax your written cancellation to 202-833-8775 or mail it to:
Symposium on the Effects of Fishing
Activities on Benthic Habitats
Attn:
Cancellations
c/o ESA
1707 H Street, NW, Suite 400
Washington, DC 20006 USA
Registration Refund Policy
A refund of
registration fees paid, minus a $25 Processing Fee, will be issued to any
registrant who provides a written cancellation request according to the Cancellation
Policy described in the preceding section.
Cancellation requests MUST be received by fax or postmarked on or before
Thursday, October 3, 2002. NO REFUNDS
will be granted for cancellations that do not arrive by fax by Thursday,
October 3, 2002, or do not bear a clear identifiable postmark of Thursday,
October 3, 2002, or earlier. Refund
checks/credit card refunds will be processed after the Symposium. PLEASE DO NOT EXPECT TO RECEIVE YOUR REFUND
BEFORE FRIDAY DECEMBER 13, 2002.
Symposium Registration Hours
Registration will
take place in the Woodlands Foyer of the Doubletree Westshore Hotel. The tentative hours for on-site registration
and pre-registration pickup of Symposium materials, Symposium Program and Abstracts,
name badges, etc. are below. Please
check the on-site Registration Desk for actual Registration Hours.
Date Hours
Monday, November 11 8:00am – 1:00pm and 4:00pm –
7:00pm
Tuesday, November 12 7:00am – 7:00pm
Wednesday, November
13 7:00am – 2:00pm and 4:00pm –
7:00pm
Thursday, November
14 7:00am – 9:00am and
11:00am – 5:00pm
Friday, November 15 7:00am – 9:30am
A Confirmation
Notice will be sent to Symposium registrants who register by the Standard
Registration deadline, Thursday, October 24, 2002. Each registrant must come to the Registration Desk to pick up all
other Symposium materials (e.g., Program and Abstracts volumes, name badge)
onsite. A Symposium Registration
receipt will be included among the materials provided at that time. Please make certain to keep this as a record
of your attendance.
All Symposium sessions will be
held in Westshore’s friendliest hotel, the Doubletree Westshore Hotel located
at 4500 West Cypresss Street in Tampa, Florida (http://www.tampadoubletree.com/). Located in the heart of the Westshore
Business District and just minutes from Tampa International Airport, area
restaurants, and the new International Mall, this facility offers the many
amenities and services. These include
24-hour complimentary transportation to and from the airport, high-speed
internet access in guestrooms and meeting rooms, an outdoor pool and whirlpool,
a 24-hour full service health club, on-site and in-room dining, and an on-site
Business Center. Standard guest rooms
feature deluxe amenities and tasteful tropical décor. Each is well appointed
with coffee maker, iron and board, hair dryer, telephone with voice mail and auto
wakeup, AM/FM clock radio, cable television with free premium channels, video
messaging, and pay-per-view movies. Guests also receive a complimentary USA
Today newspaper each weekday. Non-smoking and wheelchair access rooms are
available as well.
Reservations
The
Doubletree Westshore Hotel has reserved a block of rooms during the Symposium
under the group name "Benthic Fisheries Habitat Symposium." The rate
is $89 per night and is available for the nights of Sunday, November 10, 2002
through Thursday, November 14, 2002, as well as three days prior to and after
the Symposium. The cut-off date for booking reservations at the Symposium rate
is October 17, 2002; after this date the hotel will continue to accept
reservations, rates and room availability cannot be guaranteed.
Symposium
registrants should make their room reservations directly with the hotel. The
number for the Doubletree Westshore Hotel is 813-879-4800. Reservations may
also be made through the Doubletree toll-free number at 1-800-355-0524.
Whether you use your own travel
agent, or the official Symposium travel agency, StellarAccess, the airport most
convenient to the Symposium site is Tampa International Airport. Tampa can also be reached by car on Interstate
Highway 75 (North or South) or Interstate Highway 4 (running West from
Orlando).
Stellar Access
ESA has selected
Stellar Access, Inc. as the official Symposium travel service. Discount travel arrangements have been
negotiated for attendees. Visit http://www.stellaraccess.com/engine.cfm?Eventid=2090
to check airfares, purchase airline tickets, and reserve a rental car for the Symposium and receive contracted discounts
negotiated for Symposium participants. A
$15 transaction fee will be charged for all airline tickets purchased through
the Stellar Access on-line service.
Participants may also make travel
arrangements by calling 1-800-929-4242 and requesting discounts for Event
#2090. Outside the U.S. and Canada, call
858-805-6109. Phone reservation hours
are Monday through Friday, 6:30am to 5:00pm Pacific Time. A $30 transaction fee will be charged for all tickets purchased through
the Stellar Access phone service. Be sure to reference Group
#629.
Participants
who travel between Thursday, November 7, 2002, and Sunday, November 17, 2002,
will be eligible to receive the discounts listed below.
AVIS Discount rentals with unlimited free mileage have
been negotiated for Symposium participants.
To contact AVIS directly, call 1-800-331-1600. Reference contract
#J949009 when making your reservation.
Delta Airlines Save 5% off the lowest fares anytime and
10% off the lowest fares 60 days prior to departure. An additional 5% discount is available on certain unrestricted
fares with a 60-day advance purchase.
All rules and restrictions apply. To contact Delta Airlines directly,
call 1-800-221-1212. Reference contract
#188764A when making your reservation.
Tampa International Airport
Tampa International Airport is
one of the best in the country. Opened in 1971, there are more than 600 daily
nonstop arrivals and departures to more than 50 domestic destinations and 44
weekly nonstop scheduled arrivals from eight international markets. The main
terminal is linked to four remote buildings, which host the arrival and
departure gates, by fast two-car automated trains that run above ground.
Bright, close to hotels, with plenty of elevators and escalators and lots of
easily understood signs as well as excellent shops, the Tampa International
Airport is a pleasant surprise. A public art program was established in 1998
and has grown to include permanent, loaned, and rotating exhibits. “Not to be
missed” are the marine exhibits in each of the baggage claim areas.
Arrivals and departures on Delta
Airlines are located in Airside Terminal C. USAir and American Airlines flights
arrive and depart from Airside Terminal F. Southwest, Northwest, and
Continental flights arrive and depart from Airside Terminal A and United and
JetBlue flights arrive at Airside Terminal D. All other major airlines also
have flights into and out of Tampa International Airport
Getting from the Airport to
the Hotel
The Doubletree Westshore Hotel is located a short
ten minute drive from the Tampa International Airport. Several means of
transportation are available between the two including:
·
Rental
Car—Commercial car rental firms located in the baggage claim areas at the Tampa
International Airport include Avis, Budget, Hertz, and Dollar. Advance
reservation of rental cars is highly recommended. Rental cars are located in
the short-term parking garage and may be picked up and returned directly to the
airport.
To drive from the
Tampa International Airport to the Doubletree Westshore Hotel, follow signs to
the SR-616 East / Spruce Street ramp. Merge onto Spruce Street and go straight
to Westshore Boulevard. Turn right on Westshore Boulevard. Go to Cypress Street
and turn left. The hotel is one block ahead on the right. Complimentary hotel parking is available.
Due to the size of the Symposium, we are not able to offer
physical space for exhibitors. However, we can offer exhibitors the opportunity
to sponsor Symposium events, advertise in the Symposium Program, and distribute
literature as insertions to the carry-all bags to be received by all Symposium
participants. We also welcome donations
of prizes for the Poster Pub raffles.
If you are interested in any of these opportunities, please contact Lori
Hidinger, Benthic Symposium Coordinator, at 202-833-8773 or benthic@esa.org, for additional details or
complete and return the attached Exhibitor Opportunity Request Form. Requests for all exhibitor opportunities and
full payment must be received NO LATER THAN September 13, 2002.
SPONSORING AND PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS
American
Fisheries Society
The mission of the American Fisheries Society (AFS) is to improve the conservation and sustainability of fishery resources and aquatic ecosystems by advancing fisheries and aquatic science and promoting the development of fisheries professionals. AFS, founded in 1870, is the oldest and largest professional society representing fisheries scientists. AFS promotes scientific research and enlightened management of resources for optimum use and enjoyment by the public. It also encourages a comprehensive education for fisheries scientists and continuing on-the-job training. AFS publishes some of the world's leading fisheries research journals:
AFS organizes scientific meetings
where new results are reported and discussed. In addition to these primary
functions, the Society has many other programs in areas such as professional
certification, international affairs, public affairs, and public information. More than 100 chapters, divisions, student
subunits, and sections carry out the mission of the Society at the local,
regional, and special interest level.
For more information, see the AFS webpage at http://www.fisheries.org/.
Ecological
Society of America
The Ecological Society of America
(ESA) is a non-partisan, nonprofit organization of scientists founded in 1915
to:
ESA's 7,800 members conduct
research, teach, and work to provide the ecological knowledge needed to solve
environmental problems. ESA encourages
its diverse community of members to become more involved in the Society through
its Sections, organized along topical themes to promote the various special
interests of the Membership, and Chapters, organized on a regional basis to
enhance communication among ecologists regionally and between the parent
Society and its members.
ESA publishes a suite of
publications, from technical journals to a newsletter including: Ecology;
Ecological Monographs; Ecological Applications; Frontiers in
Ecology and Environment (new journal to be released 2003); Bulletin of
the Ecological Society of America; and NewSource. Each summer, the
Society convenes an Annual Meeting, which features the latest findings in
ecological research and attracts over 3,000 scientists and students, as well as
members of the press. For the last four
years, ESA has co-sponsored smaller, targeted conferences in addition to the
Annual Meeting.
The
Society's Public Affairs Office works to infuse ecological knowledge into
environmental decision-making, convey ecological science to the media and the
general public, and to provide services to the ecological community. The Sustainable Biosphere Initiative is the
science program office of ESA and conducts workshops, seminars, and other
activities to bring academics, federal agency representatives, non-governmental
organizations, and others to the same table to ensure that sound ecological
information is incorporated into natural resource decision-making. For more information, see the ESA
webpage at http://www.esa.org/.
National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The mission of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is to describe and predict changes in the Earth's environment and to conserve and wisely manage the Nation's coastal and marine resources. NOAA's strategy consists of seven interrelated strategic goals for environmental assessment, prediction and stewardship:
The successful execution of NOAA's missions and goals depends on its capabilities as a national resource for research, observing systems, and environmental data and information services.
NOAA programs include: the National Ocean Service; the
National Weather Service; the National Marine Fisheries Service; Ocean &
Atmospheric Research; the National Environmental Satellite, Data & Information
Service; the Coastal Ocean Program; High Performance Computing and
Communication; and Global Programs.
Financial support for the Symposium was provided by the National Marine Fisheries Service (Office of
Habitat Conservation, Office of Science and Technology, and Office of
Sustainable Fisheries), the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research
(National Sea Grant Program and National Undersea Research Program), and the
National Ocean Service (National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science and Office
of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management).
For more
information, see the NOAA webpage at http://www.noaa.gov/.
U.S.
Geological Survey
The U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS), established in 1879, is the Nation’s principal natural science and
information agency. USGS conducts research, monitoring, and assessments to
contribute to understanding the natural world—America’s lands, water, and
biological resources. USGS serves the Nation by providing reliable scientific
information to:
The scientific
nature of the USGS, its national perspective, and its non-regulatory role
enable the USGS to provide information and understanding that are policy
relevant and policy neutral. The diversity of scientific issues that demand
attention has prompted the USGS to focus its efforts into four major areas:
natural hazards, resources, the environment, and information and data
management.
USGS is comprised of the Biological
Resources Division, the Geologic Division, the National Mapping Division, and
the Water Resources Division. Financial
support for the Symposium was provided by the Biological Resources Division and
the Geologic Division. For more information, see the USGS webpage at
http://www.usgs.gov/.
Homeland
Foundation
The mission of the Homeland
Foundation is "Giving to preserve individual rights to have a safe place
to live, and to organizations that work to preserve the earth's natural
resources." Special emphasis is placed on programs for marine
conservation. The Homeland Foundation generously provided funding towards the
Symposium. For more information, see the Homeland Foundation webpage at http://www.synergos.org/globalphilanthropy/organizations/homeland.htm
or contact the Homeland Foundation at 949-494-0365.
Tampa Bay is a vibrant waterfront
area on Florida’s beautiful west coast that offers a unique blend of urban
excitement set in natural surrounding.
While originally the name of a body of water, Tampa Bay has come to
represent the region made up of the many distinct communities connected by the
Bay waters. From the distinct Latin
roots of Tampa’s historic Ybor City to the Greek history of Tarpon Springs,
from the thrills of Busch Gardens to the culture of St. Petersburg’s museums,
the area offers visitors plenty of exciting attractions and fascinating
communities to explore.
Things to
do in Tampa (on your own activities)
Whether seeking free time diversions between Symposium
events, planning activities for accompanying family members, or scouting sights
to see during a pre- or post-Symposium stay, Tampa offers a wonderful array of
activities for all ages and tastes. Below is a list of some of the more
interesting of Tampa’s many attractions. It is easiest to visit some of these
features by car, however, there are taxi service is available from the
Doubletree Westshore Hotel to downtown Tampa where there is a regular Tampa/Ybor
Trolley. There are also numerous visitor guides in the downtown Tampa area to
assist visitors. For more information
on the sights and sounds of Tampa, visit http://www.visittampabay.com.
Tampa has a unique and colorful neighborhood, Ybor City,
where the original Spanish flavor and architecture is still retained. In Ybor
(E-bor) City, Teddy Roosevelt and his Roughriders embarked on their military
adventures in the Spanish-American War. Ybor City was long the home to many of
the finest cigar makers in America and many of the old cigar factories have
been converted into restaurants, microbreweries, and art galleries. The
historic Columbia Restaurant,
founded in 1905 and Florida’s oldest and largest Spanish restaurant, is located
in Ybor City. At Columbia Restaurant, you can enjoy Paella and Flamenco
dancers. Other restaurants in Ybor City and the Tampa downtown area include the
8th Avenue Grille, Big City
Tavern, Café Creole, Café Waterside, Carlino’s Seabreeze, Carmine’s Restaurant,
Green Iguana Grill, The Loading Dock Sandwich Pub, and Valencia Gardens.
In addition to the many
restaurants in Ybor City, Tampa offers a
number of excellent and enjoyable Restaurants for “free evenings”. Among
those located in the Westshore area near the Doubletree Hotel are Armanis and Oystercatchers (located at
the Hyatt), The Castaway (located on
Courtney Campbell Causeway heading towards the beaches), Crawdaddy’s, Hemmingway’s, and The
Rusty Pelican. In South Tampa, Bern’s
Steak House is an award-winning, interntionally famous steak house and Hops Restaurant is a microbrewery
famous for its freshly made food and huge portions.
Tampa and the surrounding
communities have wonderful public access beaches for swimming, sun
bathing, walking, and many other oceanside activities. Ben T. Davis Beach,
located on the Courtney Campbell Causeway heading to Clearwater is easy to
reach. Clearwater Beach in Clearwater is rated the #1 city beach in the U.S.
with sugar-fine sand and terrific width for volleyball, sunbathing, and
swimming. Also in Clearwater is Sand Key Beach, a flour-fine white sand beach.
Treasure Island Beach is a wide community beach with excellent shells. Also
consider St. Pete’s Beach in St. Petersburg, Pass-a-Grille Beach, which is part
of the National Historic District on Florida’s West Coast Barrier Islands, and
Fort de Soto Park Beach.
Busch Gardens Tampa
Bay is the ultimate family
adventure park offering an array of fascinating attractions based on exotic
encounters with the African continent.
A unique blend of thrilling rides, one of the country’s premier zoos
featuring more than 2,700 animals, live shows, restaurants, shops and games,
Busch Gardens Tampa Bay provides unrivaled “real” excitement for guests of
every age. Busch Gardens was recently
rated the most popular theme park in Florida among residents of the Tampa Bay
area. Located at the corner of Busch
Boulevard and 40th Street, Busch Gardens Tampa Bay is 8 miles northeast of
downtown Tampa, 2 miles east of Interstate 275 at the Busch Boulevard exit, 2
miles west of Interstate 75 at exit 54 and 30 minutes east of area beaches and
Tampa International Airport. Nearly
5,000 parking spaces are available for vehicles. Spaces are available to cars
and motorcycles for $7.00 and to trucks and campers for $8.00. Adult admission is $49.95 plus tax and Child
admission (ages 3-9) is $40.95 plus tax (Children under 2 are admitted free).
Admission includes access to all rides, shows, and the majority of park
attractions. Restaurants, snack bars,
and juice stands are located conveniently throughout the park. MasterCard, VISA
and Discover are accepted at the Crown Colony and Festhaus Restaurants. Sorry,
but coolers, food, drinks, and picnic items may not be taken into the
park. For more information, visit the
Busch Gardens Tampa Bay website at http://www.buschgardens.com/buschgardens/fla/index.html.
Adventure Island consists
of 25 acres of tropical water park. There are 18 water attractions, a
championship volleyball complex, and Splash Attach, a tree house maze
overflowing with fun. Located at 10001 McKinley Drive in Tampa, you can visit
their website at http://www.adventureisland.com.
Canoe Escape
located at 9335 E. Fowler Avenue in Tampa, just minutes from the Tampa
International Airport and downtown. Canoe Escape offers two-hour to full-day downstream
paddling adventures for groups. Explore the Hillsborough River through a
16,000-acre wilderness park and discover the natural Florida – birds, turtles,
gators. For more information visit their website at http://www.canoeescape.com
Clearwater Aquarium located
in Clearwater offers a wide range of marine experiences. In addition to
observing the rehabilitation and care of rescued dolphins, whales, otters, and
sea turtles, you can get your hands wet petting stingrays in Stingray Beach, or
you can get soaked with Marine Life Adventures (reservations required), an
interactive marine experience in Clearwater Bay. To learn more, visit their
website at http://www.CMaquarium.org.
Museum of Science and Industry (MOSI) is the largest science center in the Southeastern
U.S. and home of the first IMAX Dome Theater in Florida. MOSI includes a
one-of-a-kind Diplodocus dinosaur exhibit, a fine planetarium, Bio-Works
Butterfly Gardens, and an interactive Gulf Coast Hurricane. More than 450
interactive exhibits of interest to all ages are on display. Their website is http://www.mosi.org.
Salvador Dali Museum is
located in downtown St. Petersburg. It features a world famous collection of
the works of artist Salvador Dali and other artists. Free guided tours are
offered daily. The gift shop is excellent and the museum is located near other
shops and restaurants. To find out more, see the museum website at http://www.salvadordalimuseum.org.
Raymond James Stadium (Home of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and site of SuperBowl XXV) is a must
for those sports fans among our attendees. Perhaps you can even catch the Bucs
playing the Carolina Panthers on Sunday, November 17, 2002. Additional
information is posted on their website at http://www.buccaneers.com.
The Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center is the largest performing arts center in the
Southeast, housing four theaters and an on-site restaurant. The Center hosts
year-round performances of Broadway shows and also produces grand opera,
cabaret theater, musical, and dance performances. The schedule and ticket
prices are posted on their website at http://tbpac.prg
Fishing and diving are
Tampa Bay specialties. A number of charter boats can be contacted to enjoy
these activities. To locate a charter to fit your interests and your budget, visit
http://www.visittampabay.com/ and
look for a listing of fishing and charter boats with locations, phone numbers
and web links.
And speaking of links, golf courses
are another of Tampa’s treasures.
There are a number of convenient public courses including Rocky Point, Rogers
Park, and the University of South Florida Golf Course. For more information,
contact GOLFline, Inc. at 888-719-7898. They offer free advance tee times, as
well as expert advice on most area golf courses. Tournament arrangements,
complete with transportation, can be arranged through GOLFline and individuals
as well as groups are welcome.
International Plaza Mall, adjacent to the Tampa International Airport
and very close to the Doubletree Westshore Hotel, is the place to go to “shop
till you drop.” With Nieman Marcus, Nordstrom, Lord & Taylor, and Dillard’s
all under one roof, as well as 200 specialty shops and an open-air village of
restaurants and boutiques, this is definitely the place to head to upgrade your
wardrobe or pick up a special gift to take home.
Weather and
Attire
Tampa Bay’s weather is tropical.
In the fall, the days remain sunny and warm, but the nights cool to a temperature
in the 70s. Bring light clothing for daytime activities, along with a light
sweater or jacket for the evenings. In November, the average temperature is
68ºF/20ºC with highs averaging 78ºF/25ºC and lows reaching 57ºF/13ºC. As with
most tropical climates, always bring sunscreen, sunglasses, and a cap or visor
with you, and don’t forget your bathing suit or trunks.
In addition to these items, those
planning to go on Field Trips should wear comfortable shoes and a cap or hat
with a brim and bring a small knapsack or tote bag, rain gear or poncho,
sunglasses, and bug spray. Participants
in the Terra Ceia Field Trip (FT #4) should dress for appropriately for wading
in knee-deep water, including old tennis shoes or diving boots. We also recommend bringing a towel.
Symposium attire is casual.
Khakis, polo shirts, or cotton shirts are standard attire. Because there may be
changes of temperature due to air conditioning in the meeting rooms, you should
consider bringing a sweater, light jacket, or sweatshirt. The Open House and
“Taste of the Tropics” Reception at the Florida Aquarium is not dressy;
however, you may wish to bring something festive or colorful (like a Hawaiian
shirt or a comfortable skirt) to wear on this outing.
To check the weather before you
leave home, visit http://www.weathercenter.com/
and get the most up-to-date Tampa weather and forecasts.
To cancel or inquire about
your presentation or for information about the content of the scientific
program (i.e., Invited Speakers, Contributed Oral Presentations and Poster
Presentations), contact benthic@esa.org.
For information about the
specifications for Oral Presentations and Poster Presentations, please review
the information posted on the Symposium website at http://walrus.wr.usgs.gov/bh2002/ under Agenda.
For questions about
Symposium Registration, please contact the ESA Registrar at (202) 833-8773 or benthic@esa.org.
To register by mail, send
your form and payment by check or credit card to: Symposium on Effects of Fishing Activities on
Benthic Habitats, c/o
ESA, Department 0666, Washington, DC 20073. DO NOT MAIL CASH.
To register online, please
link to the On-line Symposium Registration Form from the Symposium website at http://www.esa.org/benthic/registration.htm. Payment for on-line registration MUST be by
credit card (MasterCard or VISA ONLY).
To register by fax (credit
card users only), fax your form to (202) 833-8775. Please include a cover sheet
with your Symposium Registration Form indicating that your fax is for the
Symposium on Effects of Fishing Activities on Benthic Habitats.
For hotel information and
reservations, please contact the Doubletree
Westshore Hotel directly at 813-879-4800 and reference the Benthic Fisheries
Habitat Symposium.
For information about
discount airline reservations or car rental reservations, contact Stellar
Access using the direct electronic link at http://www.stellaraccess.com/engine.cfm?Eventid=2090,
or call 800-929-4242. Any agent will be able to assist you. Be sure to
reference Group ID #629 to receive the best discount. Due to regulations
recently adopted by the airlines, a $15 transaction fee will be charged for all
tickets purchased online, and a $30 transaction processing fee will be charged
for all tickets purchased by telephone.
For information about the
Tampa Bay area, please contact the Tampa Bay Visitors and Convention Bureau at
1-800-44-TAMPA (223-2752
within the 813 area code) or on-line at http://www.visittampabay.com/.
For inquiries OTHER THAN those listed above,
contact Lori Hidinger, Benthic Symposium Coordinator
by phone at 202-833-8773
by email at benthic@esa.org