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Kristin N. Marshall

Researcher at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Publications -  47
Citations -  1778

Kristin N. Marshall is an academic researcher from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fisheries management & Marine ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 44 publications receiving 1426 citations. Previous affiliations of Kristin N. Marshall include National Marine Fisheries Service & Colorado State University.

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Fleet dynamics and fishermen behavior: lessons for fisheries managers

TL;DR: This paper reviewed fleet dynamics and fishermen behavior from an economic and sociological basis in developing fisheries, in mature fisheries near full exploitation, and in senescent fisheries that are over-exploited.
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Ecological indicators to capture the effects of fishing on biodiversity and conservation status of marine ecosystems

Marta Coll, +42 more
TL;DR: IndiSeas (Indicators for the Seas) as mentioned in this paper is a suite of indicators to quantify the effects of fishing on the broader ecosystem using several criteria (i.e., ecological meaning, sensitivity to fishing, data availability, management objectives and public awareness).
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Risks of ocean acidification in the California Current food web and fisheries: ecosystem model projections.

TL;DR: The effects of ocean acidification on an upwelling system that already experiences inherently low pH conditions, the California Current is described and a set of projections generally support and build upon previous findings and set the stage for hypotheses to guide future modeling and experimental analysis on the effects of OA on marine ecosystems and fisheries.
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Stream hydrology limits recovery of riparian ecosystems after wolf reintroduction

TL;DR: Results from a decade-long experiment in Yellowstone show that predator restoration may not quickly repair effects of predator removal in ecosystems, and restoration of willow communities depended on removing browsing and restoring hydrological conditions that prevailed before the removal of wolves.
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Conservation Challenges of Predator Recovery

TL;DR: This work uses two food webs with parallel conservation challenges, the Northeast Pacific Ocean and the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, to demonstrate legal/policy conflicts and the policy levers that exist to ameliorate conflicts and suggests a framework that incorporates multispecies science, policy tools, and tradeoff analyses into management.