DocumentCode
2932967
Title
Offshore petroleum structures lure fishermen seaward in the central Gulf of Mexico
Author
Auyong, J. ; Ditton, R. ; Reggio, V., Jr.
Author_Institution
University of Hawaii, Sea Grant Extension, Honolulu, HI, USA
fYear
1985
fDate
12-14 Nov. 1985
Firstpage
561
Lastpage
567
Abstract
In state and federal waters offshore Louisiana more than 3500 structures ranging in size from single to multiwell platforms attract thousands of of boat fishermen. A 1980-1981 study supported by the Minerals Management Service revealed distinct offshore fishing patterns. Based on over 12,000 sightings of boat fishing activity by industry volunteers on over 300 major platforms, the study indicated that access, shelf characteristics, transportation networks, demographics and the interrelationship of these factors influence the amount and location of offshore platform fishing. These factors produced an uneven distribution of activity along the coast and seawards; in fact, one-fifth of the study platforms accounted for more than half of all the fishing activity. Such findings on the use patterns associated with offshore structures have implications for planning and evaluating artificial reef systems as well as supplement biological and engineering knowledge.
Keywords
Boats; Demography; Design engineering; Environmental factors; Fuel economy; Knowledge engineering; Marine animals; Marine transportation; Petroleum; Shipbuilding industry;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS '85 - Ocean Engineering and the Environment
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA, USA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.1985.1160282
Filename
1160282
Link To Document