Keith Criddle

Keith Criddle

Ted Stevens Distinguished Professor of Marine Policy

Aquaculture
Fisheries Conservation
Sustainable Harvesting
Human Dimensions and Community Development
Fisheries Management


College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences
Lena Point 203
17101 Lena Point Loop Road
Juneau, AK 99801
907-796-5449
kcriddle@alaska.edu

Office Hours

Tuesday & Thursday
1:00–2:00 pm
203 Lena Point Building
or by appointment

Education

University of California, Davis
Ph.D., Agricultural Economics
1989

University of California Davis
M.S., Agricultural Economics
1984

California State University Sacramento
B.S., Biological Sciences and Economics (dual major)
1982

 

Curriculum Vitae

 

Advising

 

Publications

Criddle, K.R. 2021. Human dimensions. Chapter 9 (pages 75-82) in PC Chandler PC, S Yoo (editors), Marine Ecosystems of the North Pacific Ocean 2009–2016: Synthesis Report. PICES Special Publication 7. ISBN 1813-8519.

Williams, B.C., K.R. Criddle, G.H. Kruse. 2021. An agent-based model to examine parallel and divergent fishery management strategies for transboundary stocks. Natural Resource Modeling.

Figus, E., K.R. Criddle. 2019. Characterizing preferences of fishermen to inform decision-making: a case study of the Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis) fishery off Alaska. PLoS ONE 14(3):e0212537

Chenoweth, E., K.R. Criddle. 2019. The economic impacts of humpback whale depredation on hatchery-released juvenile Pacific salmon in Southeast Alaska. Marine and Coastal Fisheries 11(1):62-75.

Figus, E., K.R. Criddle. 2019. Comparing self-reported incidental catch among fishermen targeting Pacific halibut and a fishery-independent survey. Marine Policy 100: 371-381.

Sugihara, G., K.R. Criddle, H. Ye, A. Lee, G. Pao, C. James, E. Saberski, A. Giron-Nava. 2018. Comprehensive incentives for reducing Chinook salmon bycatch in the Bering Sea walleye pollock fishery: Individual Tradable Encounter Credits. Regional Studies in Marine Science 22: 70–81.

Powell, J.E., Wipfli, M.S., Criddle, K.R., E.R. Schoen. 2018. Will Alaska’s fisheries regime prove resilient? Kenai River fishery management as a model for adaptive governance. Fisheries 43(1): 26-30.

Link, J.S., O. Thébaud, D.C. Smith, A.D.M. Smith, J. Schmidt, J. Rice, J.J. Poos, C. Pita, D. Lipton, M. Kraan, S. Frusher, L. Doyen, A. Cudennec, K.R. Criddle, and D. Bailly. 2017. Keeping humans in the ecosystem. ICES Journal of Marine Science 74(7): 1947–1956.

Adkison, M. and K.R. Criddle. 2017. Incorporating non-baseline characters into genetic mixture analyses. Fisheries Â鶹¹ÙÍø 193: 217-222.

Debroy, P., M. Krishnan, A.D. Upadhyay, V. Ramasubramanian, K.R. Criddle, V.R. Kiresu, and S.K. Datta. 2016. Resource distribution, growth, and strategies for enhancing fish production in north-eastern states of India. Indian Journal of Fisheries 63(2): 1-7. DOI:

Warpinski, S., M. Herrmann, J.A. Greenberg, K.R. Criddle. 2016. Alaska’s sablefish fishery after Individual Fishing Quota Program implementation: an international economic market model. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 36: 864–875. DOI:10.1080/02755947.2016.1165766

Yasumiishi, E.C.M., K.R. Criddle, J.H. Helle, N. Hillgruber and F.J. Mueter. 2016. Effect of population abundance and climate on the growth of two populations of chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) in the eastern North Pacific Ocean. Fishery Bulletin 114(2): 203-219. (doi:10.7755/FB.114.2.7)

Criddle, K.R. and  I. Shimizu. 2014. Economic importance of wild salmon. Chapter 14 (pages 269-306) in P.T.K. Woo, D.J. Noakes (editors). Salmon: Biology, Ecological Impacts, and Economic Importance. Nova Publishers, New York, USA

Specialties

  • Aquaculture
  • Bioeconomics
  • Fisheries Management
  • Marine Policy
  • Sustainable Fisheries

 

Â鶹¹ÙÍø Overview

My research explores the intersection between the natural sciences, economics, and public policy and is driven by an interest in the sustainable management of living marine resources of the North Pacific. I direct graduate projects in bioeconomics, statistical inference, and policy analysis and teach courses in resource and environmental economics, econometrics and time series analysis, operations research and decision theory, fisheries law, policy analysis, and economic development for fisheries-dependent communities.

 

Other Links