Glossary
Chapter 14: Natural Resource
Use--Fisheries
NO Deletions
A
aquaculture raising fish for harvest in controlled conditions.
B
bycatch fishery catch discarded because it is undersized or
non-marketable.
C
carrying capacity the level of population and consumption sustainable by
the available natural resource base.
certification the process of certifying products that meet certain
standards, such as certifying produce grown using organic farming techniques.
E
ecolabeling a label on a good that provides information concerning the
environmental impact of producing the good.
ecological complexity the presence of many different living and
nonliving elements in an ecosystem interacting in complex patterns; ecosystem
complexity implies that human impact on ecosystems may be unpredictable.
economic efficiency an allocation of resources that maximizes net social
benefits; perfectly competitive markets in the absence of externalities are
efficient.
economic optimum a result that maximizes an economic criterion, such as
efficiency or profits.
economic rent income that accrues to the owner of a scarce resource.
I
individual transferable quotas (ITQs) tradable rights to harvest a
resource, such as a permit to harvest a particular quantity of fish.
inflection point the point on a curve where the second derivative equals
zero, indicating a change from positive to negative curvature or vice versa. (Alternative
definition: the point on a curve where the rate of increase changes
from increasing at a faster rate to increasing at a slower rate, example is
point B on page 279)
institutional failure the failure of governments or other institutions
to prevent resource overexploitation, or the use of policies that promote
resource overexploitation and environmental damage.
L
Law of the Sea a 1982 international treaty regulating marine fisheries.
license fee the fee paid for access to a resource, such as a fishing license.
logistic curve an S-shaped growth curve tending toward an upper limit.
M
market failure the failure of certain markets to provide a socially
efficient allocation of resources.
maximum sustainable yield (MSY) the maximum quantity of a natural
resource that can be harvested annually without depleting the resource stock or
population.
monoculture an agricultural system involving the growing of the same
crop exclusively on a piece of land year after year.
O
open-access equilibrium the level of use of an open-access resource that
results from a market with free entry; this use level may lead to resource
depletion.
open-access resource(s) a resource that offers unrestricted access such
as an ocean fishery or the atmosphere.
overfishing a level of fishing effort that depletes fishery stock over
time.
P
population biology the study of how a species population changes as a
result of environmental conditions.
precautionary principle the view that policies should account for
uncertainty by taking steps to avoid outcomes that are damaging to health or
the environment, especially when such outcomes are irreversible.
private ownership the provision of certain exclusive rights to a
particular resource, such as the right of a landowner to restrict trespassing.
Q
quota (system) a system of limiting resource access through user limits
on the permissible resource harvest.
R
renewable resource(s) resources supplied on a continuing basis by
ecosystems; renewable resources such as forests and fisheries can be depleted
through exploitation.
rent dissipation the loss of potential social and economic benefits in a
market because of market failure.
resilience ecosystem capacity to recover from adverse impact.
S
sink function the environment’s ability to absorb and render harmless
the by-products of human activity.
source function the environment’s ability to make services and raw
materials available for human use.
stable equilibrium an equilibrium of, for example, a renewable resource
stock level, to which the system will tend to return after short-term changes
in conditions.
subsidies government assistance to an industry or economic activity;
subsidies can be direct, through financial assistance, or indirect, through
protective policies.
sustainable (natural resource) management management of natural
resources such that natural capital remains constant over time, including
maintenance of both stocks and flows.
T
total product the total quantity of a good or service produced with a
given quantity of inputs.
tragedy of the commons the tendency for common property resources to be
overexploited because no one has an incentive to conserve the resource, while
individual financial incentives promote expanded exploitation.
U
unstable equilibrium a temporary equilibrium of, for example, a
renewable resource stock level, that can be altered by minor changes in
conditions, resulting in a large change in stock levels.