Laserfiche WebLink
<br /> <br />.. <br /> <br />Perspective <br /> <br />Baumer, F.L. 1973. Romanticism, p. 198-204. In P. Weiner <br />[ed.] Dictionary of the history of ideas. Charles Scribner, <br />New York. 485 p. <br />Billington, N., and P.D.N. Hebert [Eds]. 1991. International <br />symposium on the ecological and genetic implications of <br />fish introductions. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 48(Suppl. 1): <br />1-181. <br />Boas, G. 1973. Nature, p. 346-351. In P. Weiner [ed.] Dictio- <br />nary of the history of ideas. Charles Scribner, New York. <br />485 p. <br />Brooks, J.L., and S.I. Dodson. 1965. Predation, body size, and <br />composition of plankton. Science (Washington, D.C.), 150: <br />28-35. <br />Callicott, J.8. 1991. Conservation ethics and fishery manage- <br />ment. Fisheries, 16: 22-28. <br />Carlton, J.T., and J.B. Geller. 1993. Ecological roulette: the <br />global transport of nonindigenous marine organisms. Science <br />(Washington, D.C.), 261: 78-82. <br />Carpenter, S.R. 1988. Complex interactions in lake communi- <br />ties. Springer-Verlag, New York. 283 p. <br />Carr, M.H., and D.C. Reed. 1993. Conceptual issues relevant to <br />marine harvest refuges: examples from temperate reef fishes. <br />Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 50: 2019-2028. <br />Christie, W.1., M. Becker, J.W. Cowden, and J.R. Vallentyne. <br />1986. Managing the Great Lakes as a home. J. Gt. Lakes <br />Res. 12: 2-17. <br />Clarke, C.H.D. 1963. A philosophy of conservation, p. 187-198. <br />In J.R. Dymond [ed.] Fish and wildlife a memorial to <br />W.1.K. Harkness. Longmans, Toronto. 214 p. <br />Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. <br />Canadian species at risk April 1993. Committee on the <br />Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, Ottawa, Ont. <br />Ms Rep. 11 p. <br />Costanza, R., and H.E. Daly. 1992. Natural capital and sus- <br />tainable development. Conserv. BioI. 6: 37-46. <br />Coventry, A.F. 1963. The naturalist in modem society, p. 17-27. <br />In J.R. Dymond [ed.] Fish and wildlife a memorial to <br />W.1.K. Harkness. Longmans, Toronto. 214 p. <br />Crossman, E.J. 1991. Introduced freshwater fishes: a review <br />of the North American perspective with emphasis on Canada. <br />Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 48(Suppl.l): 46-57. <br />Daily, G.C., and P.R. Ehrlich. 1992. Population, sustainability, <br />and earth's carrying capacity. BioScience, 42: 761-771. <br />Danielson, B.1. 1991. Communities in a landscape: the influence <br />of habitat heterogeneity on the interactions between species. <br />Am. Nat. 138: ll05-ll20. <br />Danielson, 8.J. 1992. Habitat selection, interspecific interactions <br />and landscape composition. Evol. Ecol. 6: 399-411. <br />Department of Fisheries and Oceans. 1986. Policy for the man- <br />agement of fish habitat. Fish Habitat Management Branch, <br />Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Ottawa, Ont. 30 p. <br />Emery, L. 1985. Review of fish species introduced into the <br />Great Lakes, 1819-1974. Gt. Lakes Fish. Comm. Tech. Rep. <br />No. 45. 31 p. <br />Evans, D.O., and C.H. Olver. 1995. Introduction of lake trout, <br />Salvelinus namaycush, to inland lakes of Ontario, Canada: <br />factors contributing to successful colonization. J. Gt. Lakes <br />Res. 21(Suppl. 1): 30-53. <br />Evans, D.O., and c.c. Willox. 1991. Loss of exploited, indige- <br />nous populations of lake trout, Salvelinus namaycush, by <br />stocking of non-native stocks. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. <br />48(Suppl. 1): 134-147. <br />Evans, D.O., B.A. Henderson, N.J. Bax, T.R. Marshall, <br />R.T. Oglesby, and W.J. Christie. 1987. Concepts and meth- <br />ods of community ecology applied to freshwater fisheries <br />management. Can. 1. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 44(Suppl. 2): 448-470. <br /> <br />,i:: <br />l\~ <br />.1 <br />;;\ <br /> <br />~: <br /> <br />1593 <br /> <br />Finlayson, A.C. 1994. Fishing for truth. Institute for Social and <br />Economic Research, Memorial University of Newfoundland, <br />St John's, Nfld. 176 p. <br />Folke, C., N. Kautsky, and M. Troell. 1994. The costs of <br />eutrophication from salmon farming: implications for policy. <br />J. Environ. Manage. 40: 173-182. <br />Francis, G.R., 1.1. Magnuson, H.A. Regier, and D.R. Talhelm. <br />1979. Rehabilitating Great Lakes ecosystems. Gt. Lakes <br />Fish. Comm. Tech. Rep. No. 37. 99 p. <br />Hays, S.P. 1959. Conservation and the gospel of efficiency. <br />The progressive conservation movement, 1890-1920. Harvard <br />University Press, Cambridge, Mass. 297 p. <br />Hewitt, C.G. 1918. Report of the Ninth Annual Meeting of the <br />Commission of Conservation of Canada, Ottawa. 282 p. <br />Hilborn, R. 1992. Hatcheries and the future of salmon in the <br />Northwest. Fisheries, 17: 5-8. <br />Hilborn R., and J. Winton. 1993. Learning to enhance salmon <br />production: lessons from the Sa1monid Enhancement Pro- <br />gram. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 50: 2043-2056. <br />Hilborn, R., E.K. Pikitch, and R.C. Francis. 1993. Current <br />trends in including risk and uncertainty in stock assessment <br />and harvest decisions. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 50: 874-880. <br />Hindar, K., N. Ryman, and F. Utter. 1991. Genetic effects of cul- <br />tured fish on natural fish populations. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. <br />Sci. 48: 945-957. <br />International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural <br />Resources. 1980. World conservation strategy. Living resource <br />conservation for sustainable development. Prepared with <br />the advice, cooperation, and financial assistance of the United <br />Nations Environment Programme and the World Wildlife <br />Fund and in collaboration with the Food and Agriculture <br />Organization of the United Nations and the United Nations <br />Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Interna- <br />tional Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural <br />Resources, Gland, Switzerland. <br />Johnson, L. 1994. Long-term experiments on the stability of <br />two fish populations in previously un exploited arctic lakes. <br />Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 51: 209-225. <br />Krakauer, 1. 1991. Brownfellas. Outside, 16: 69-72, ll4-ll6. <br />Lande, R.,and G.F. Barrowclough. 1987. Effective population <br />size, genetic'variation, and their use in population man- <br />agement, p. 87-123. In M.E. Soule [ed.] Viable populations <br />for conservation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, <br />England. 189 p. ( <br />Larkin, P.A. 1977. An epitaph for the concept of maximum <br />sustained yield. Trans. Am. Fish. Soc. 78: 1-11. <br />Leopold, A. 1933. Game management. Charles Scribner's Sons, <br />New York. 481 p. <br />Leopold, A. 1939. A biotic view of land. J. For. 37: 727-730. <br />Leopold, A. 1949. A Sand County almanac and sketches here <br />and there. Oxford University Press, New York. 226 p. <br />Loftus, K.H. 1976. Science for Canada's fisheries rehabilita- <br />tion needs. J. Fish. Res. Board Can. 33: 1822-1857. <br />Loftus, K.H., and B.A. Regier [Eds]. 1972. Effects of fish- <br />eries exploitation on salmonidcommunities in oligotrophic <br />lakes. J. Fish. Res. Board Can. 29: 959-968. <br />Ludwig, D., R. Hilborn, and C. Walters. 1993. Uncertainty, <br />resource exploitation, and conservation-lessons from his- <br />tory. Science (Washington, D.C.), 260: 17,36. <br />Magnuson, J.1. 1976. Managing with exotics: a game of chance. <br />Trans. Am. Fish. Soc. 105: 1-9. <br />McQueen, D.J., J.R. Post, and E.L. Mills. 1986. Trophic rela- <br />tionships in freshwater pelagic ecosystems. Can. J. Fish. <br />Aquat. Sci. 43: 1571-1581. <br />Meffe, G.K. 1992. Techno-arrogance and halfway technolo- <br />gies: salmon hatcheries on the Pacific coast of North Amer- <br />ica. Conserv. BioI. 6: 350-354. <br />