Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries, 2, 177-186 (1992)
Book reviews
Quantitative Fisheries Stock Assessment: Choice, Dynamics and Uncertainty
R. Hilborn and C.J. Waiters
Chapman & Hall, London, 1992
ISBN 0-412-02271-0, £38.00, $29.95
Hard cover, pp. xv + 570, 57 tables, 170 figures
Contains an IBM format 5~/4-inch 1.2 Mbyte floppy disc with 199 files
This book is intended as a textbook and reference for courses in fisheries stock assess-
ment and management. It is aimed at advanced undergraduates or professionals but does
not, the authors claim, require advanced calculus or linear algebra. Such claims are
common for many textbooks - this is one occasion where I can agree. The contents are
divided into four sections: (I) Introduction (i.e. the need for analysis); (II) Behaviour of
Fisheries; (III) Estimation of Parameters and (IV) Managing Fisheries. The authors state
at the outset that they regard Sections II and IV as the most important and that Section
III covers material that is often covered elsewhere. Nevertheless, Section III is by far the
largest portion of the book and gives a complete flavour that makes the whole very
appealing. What many readers will find poorly represented (as the authors acknowledge)
are tropical stock assessment and the analysis of length data.
There is an accompanying IBM 5 t/4-inch floppy disc containing 199 files organized on
a one-subdirectory-per-chapter basis. All the programs are written to run either with
QuickBasic (available with MS DOS 5) or with GWBASIC/BASICA (available with MS
DOS 4). The vast majority of the files run with QuickBasic; at the time of writing the
review I do not have a copy of that program and so cannot comment on the programs on
the disc. All the programs, however, are collected by the authors from their own teaching
material and should be well tried and tested. The intention has been to provide
straightforward programs that work and that can be built upon, rather than highly user-
friendly products. The files on the disc may be freely distributed and should provide
excellent material for teaching purposes. The documentation on file is succinct and easy
to follow. It has been distributed both as Microsoft Word (for DOS) and plain ASCII files.
The main criteria that most readers will use to judge this book are its breadth of
coverage of the field and its amenability to the intended audience. Taking the second
criterion first, the authors have, in my opinion, produced a very readable book that is
clearly laid out and is actually quite enjoyable! The style of writing is not at all formal and
there is no belabouring of points or recourse to jargon. There are sufficient tables and
figures to be useful, but not an overcluttering. Nor are there the numerous, distracting
boxes and asides that seem to bedevil so many modern textbooks. My only quibble, and it
is one of taste, is that there are, perhaps, just a few too many rhetorical questions. Are
they really necessary? Overall, I think that the book will prove easy to pick up both as a
source of ideas and as a manual. The style is accessible to students and professionals alike
and also to non-native English speakers.
The material covered is not exhaustive, nor is it very detailed in any one area. The
point of the book, though, is not to provide a manual of state-of-the-art assessment
methodology. What is provided is a collection of material that clearly distinguishes
0960-3166 © 1992 Chapman& Hall