Skip to content
  • About
    • HABITABLE
    • Objectives
    • Partners
    • Research Team
    • External Expert Advisory Board
  • Research
    • Data Collection
    • Primary methods
    • Work Packages
  • Publications
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Podcasts
  • Scenario Narratives
  • For Journalists
  • Contact
  • About
    • HABITABLE
    • Objectives
    • Partners
    • Research Team
    • External Expert Advisory Board
  • Research
    • Data Collection
    • Primary methods
    • Work Packages
  • Publications
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Podcasts
  • Scenario Narratives
  • For Journalists
  • Contact

Publication

FisherMob : Un modèle bioéconomique de la mobilité des pêcheurs

  • 29 March 2021

Sea fishing is a highly mobile activity, favoured by the vastness of the oceans, the absence of physical boundaries and the abstraction of legislative boundaries. Understanding and anticipating this mobility is a major challenge for fisheries management issues, both at the national and international levels. “FisherMob” is a free Gama tool designed to study the effect of economic and biological factors on the dynamics of connected fisheries. It incorporate the most important processes involved in fisheries dynamics: fish abundance variability, price of the fishing effort and ex-vessel fish market price that which depends on the ratio between offer and demand. The tool uses as input a scheme of a coastal area with delimited fishing sites, fish biological parameters and fisheries parameters. It runs with a userfriendly graphic interface and generates output files that can be post-processed easily using graphic and statistical software.

Authored by Timothée Brochier & Alassane Bah

Source : CNRS

Document(s)

FisherMob: Un modèle bioéconomique de la mobilité des pêcheurs

Author(s)

Loading...
Brochier IRD
Dr. Timothée Brochier
WP3
The French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD)

Partners

HABITABLE aims to significantly advance our understanding of the current interlinkages between climate impacts and migration and displacement patterns, in order to better anticipate their future evolutions.

About

  • HABITABLE
  • Objectives
  • Partners
  • Research Team
  • External Expert Advisory Board

Research

  • Data Collection
  • Primary Methods
  • Work Packages

Outcomes

  • Publications
  • Events
  • Blog

Other

  • Contact Us
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Login

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 869395. The content reflects only the authors’ views, and the European Commission is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains.


Subscribe to our Newsletter