Integrating across scales: effectively applying science for the successful
conservation of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
Abstract:
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) is an excellent species
on which to focus synthetic, integrative investigations because it is
an economically important species that captures the public imagination,
is heavily impacted by humans, uses several ecosystems over its life,
and is the subject of a large body of extant literature. The following
24 papers were solicited to provide the biological basis for effective
and innovative approaches that biologists, managers, and social scientists
can use to develop policies that sustain Atlantic salmon and related
species. Together these papers highlight the need for and benefits of
(a) synthesizing within populations, (b) choosing the appropriate scale,
(c) comparing across populations using rigorous, focused, question-oriented
methods, (d) integrating across disciplines, (e) incorporating the human
perspective, (f) linking multiple ecosystems, and (g) applied problem
solving. To show how Atlantic salmon can guide research and conservation
efforts for other species in other systems, we review the justification
for the supplement and summarize the defining concepts that emerge from
the volume.
Mather ME, Parrish DL, Folt CL, DeGraaf RM., CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES
AND AQUATIC SCIENCES 55: 1-8 Suppl. 1 1998
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