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Grant G. Thompson

Researcher at National Marine Fisheries Service

Publications -  7
Citations -  197

Grant G. Thompson is an academic researcher from National Marine Fisheries Service. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pacific cod & Water column. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 144 citations.

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Chapter 2: Assessment of the Pacific Cod Stock in the Eastern Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Area

TL;DR: In this paper, size composition data from the 2002 and January-September 2003 commercial fisheries were incorporated into the model and catch data for 1991-2002 were recompiled, and the biomass estimate from the 2003 EBS bottom trawl survey was incorporated.
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Identifying management actions that promote sustainable fisheries

TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive evaluation of multiple, co-occurring management actions on the sustainability status of marine populations has been lacking, and the authors compiled detailed management histories for 288 assessed fisheries from around the world (accounting for 45% of those with formal stock assessments) and used hierarchical time-series analyses to estimate effects of different management interventions on trends in stock status.
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Testing Decision Rules for Categorizing Species’ Extinction Risk to Help Develop Quantitative Listing Criteria for the U.S. Endangered Species Act

TL;DR: This work developed and tested the framework for quantitative decision rules for listing species under the U.S. ESA and evaluated performance of the decision rules under different data quantities and qualities on the basis of the relative importance of misclassification errors.
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Proximity of Pacific cod to the sea floor: Using archival tags to estimate fish availability to research bottom trawls

TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimated the percentage of Pacific cod available to Alaskan bottom trawl surveys from the proximity of tagged cod to the seafloor by subtracting tag depth from bottom depth, estimated as the maximum depth recorded during each 24-h day.