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Tel:
Alan C. Haynie, Ph.D.
Alaska Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries
7600 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115
206-526-4253
Fax: 206-526-6723
email:[email protected]
Education
A. B. Stanford University, Economics and International Relations, 1994
M. A. University of Washington, Economics, 2003
Ph. D. University of Washington, Economics, 2005
Dissertation Title: “Expected Profit Model: A New Method to Measure the Welfare Impacts of Marine
Protected Areas.”
Professional Experience
• Economist at NOAA Fisheries / AFSC / REFM, Seattle, WA: 2004-present
• Affiliate Faculty Member, University of Washington School of Marine Affairs, 2006-present
• Affiliate Faculty Member, University of Alaska Fairbanks, SFOS, 2013-present
• Environmental Consultant, Cascadia Consulting Group, Seattle, WA, 1996-1999
Research Description
My research and policy analysis focus on the spatial analysis of North Pacific fisheries under
changing environmental, biological, and market conditions and with the implementation of
catch shares. My work also explores the design and implementation of bycatch reduction
incentives, the evaluation of bycatch hotspot closures, and the identification of unintended
consequences of marine reserves. I was a PI of NPRB’s Bering Sea Integrated Ecosystem
Research Program and I am a member of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council’s
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Groundfish Plan Team. I oversee the spatial economics toolbox
for fisheries (FishSET), a large NOAA Fisheries initiative to improve the utilization of spatial
modeling in fisheries management.
Awards
Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), 2012
Best Research Paper by NMFS Economist 2008-2010 (1st Place, 2010)
Best Research Paper by NMFS Economist 2006-2008 (2nd Place, 2008)
NMFS-Sea Grant Marine Resource Economics Fellowship, 2003-2004
Dean’s Award for Service, Stanford University, 1991
Current Related Project Activities
2010-Present: Spatial Economics Toolbox for Fisheries (FishSET). Currently leading a large national
initiative to integrate available fisheries data with state-of-the-art spatial economics models
to better inform fisheries management in various Alaska and US fisheries
2008-Present: Member, North Pacific Fishery Management Council Bering Sea / Aleutian Islands
Groundfish Plan Team.
2008-2014: PI, Bering Sea Integrated Ecosystem Research Program. One of a large number of PIs involved
in an interdisciplinary effort to understand how the Bering Sea ecosystem will be impacted
by climate change.
2005-present: NPFMC salmon bycatch reduction efforts. Participating in on-going analysis of Chinook and
chum salmon bycatch reduction efforts by the NPFMC. As well as presenting many times to
the Council, SSC, and Advisory Panel, I have led public meetings on data collection and met
with a wide range of stakeholders.
Haynie short CV, September 2015
1
Select Articles Published and In Press
Abbott, J., A. Haynie, and M. Reimer. 2015. “Hidden Flexibility: Institutions, Incentives and the
Margins of Selectivity in Fishing.” Land Economics 91 (1): 169–195.
Rose, K.A., J. Fiechter, E. N. Curchitser, K. Hedstrom, M. Bernal, S.Creekmore, A. Haynie, S. Ito, S.
Lluch-Cota, B. A. Megrey, C. A. Edwards, D. Checkley, T. Koslow, S. McClatchie, F. Werner, A.
MacCall, V. Agostini, 2015. “Demonstration of a fully-coupled end-to-end model for small pelagic fish
using sardine and anchovy in the California Current,” Progress in Oceanography, Available online 4
February 2015, ISSN 0079-6611, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2015.01.012.
Haynie, A. 2014. “Estimating the Value of a Fishing Right: An Analysis of Changing Usage and Value
in the Western Alaska Community Development Quota (CDQ) Program.” Fisheries Science 80 (2): 181191.
Peterson, M.J., F. Mueter, K. Criddle, A. Haynie. 2014. "Killer Whale Depredation and Associated
Costs to Alaskan Sablefish, Pacific Halibut and Greenland Turbot Longliners." PLoS ONE 9(2): e88906.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0088906
Haynie, A. and L. Pfeiffer. 2013. “Climatic and economic drivers of the Bering Sea pollock (Theragra
chalcogramma) fishery: Implications for the future.” Canadian Journal of Aquatic and Fisheries
Science. 70(6): 841-853.
Sanchirico, J., D. Lew, A. Haynie, D. Kling, D. Layton. 2013. “Conservation values in marine
ecosystem-based management.” Marine Policy, 38:523-530.
Haynie, A. and L. Pfeiffer. 2012. “Why economics matters for understanding the effects of climate
change on fisheries.” ICES Journal of Marine Science, 69 (7): 1160-1167.
Fell, H. and A. Haynie. 2012. “Spatial Competition with Changing Market Institutions.” Journal of
Applied Econometrics, DOI: 10.1002/jae.2272.
Abbott, J.K. and A.C. Haynie. 2012. “What Are We Protecting? The Challenges of Marine Protected
Areas for Multispecies Fisheries.” Ecological Applications, 22(3): 762–777.
Pfeiffer, L. and A.C. Haynie. 2012. “The Effect of Decreasing Seasonal Sea Ice Cover on the Bering
Sea Pollock Fishery.” ICES Journal of Marine Science, 69(7), 1148–1159.
Fell, H. and A. Haynie. 2011. “Estimating Time-varying Bargaining Power: A Fishery Application.”
Economic Inquiry 49(3): 685-696.
Ianelli, J.N., A. Hollowed, A. Haynie, F. Mueter, and N. Bond. 2011. “Evaluating Management
Strategies for Eastern Bering Sea Walleye Pollock (Theragra Chalcogramma) in a Changing
Environment.” ICES Journal of Marine Science 68 (6): 1297-1304.
Haynie, A. and D. Layton. 2010. “An Expected Profit Model for Monetizing Fishing Location
Choices.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 59(2): 165-176.
Haynie, A., R. Hicks and K. Schnier. 2009. “Common Property, Information, and Cooperation:
Commercial Fishing in the Bering Sea.” Ecological Economics 69(2): 406-413.
Branch, T., Hilborn, R., Haynie, A. et. al. 2006. "Fleet dynamics and fishermen behavior: lessons for
fisheries managers," Canadian Journal of Fisheries & Aquatic Sciences 63: 1647-1668.
Haynie short CV, September 2015
2
Select Working Papers
Haynie, A.C. and H.P. Huntington. 2015. “Strong connections, loose coupling: The influence of the
Bering Sea ecosystem on commercial fisheries and subsistence harvests in Alaska.” Under review.
Reimer, M., J. Abbott, and A. Haynie. 2015. “Empirical Models of the Fishery Production Process:
Conflating Technology with Incentives?” Under review.
Watson, J., A. Haynie, P. Sullivan, and L. Perruso. 2015. “Characterizing behavior and effort among
multi-gear, multi-species fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico.” Under Review.
Pfeiffer, L. and A.C. Haynie. 2014. “The effects of catch share management on rent generation through
targeting and production choices.” Under review.
Haynie, A. and L. Pfeiffer. 2014. “Climate change and fisher behavior in the Bering Sea/Aleutian
Islands Pacific Cod longline fishery.” Working paper.
Kling, D., J. Sanchirico, A. Haynie, and D. Lew. 2013. “Spatial Dynamics of Multiple Ecosystem
Services: The Case of the Western Steller Sea Lion and Commercial Fisheries,” Under Review.
Haynie, A., P. Sullivan and J. Watson. “Using Vessel Monitoring System Data to Estimate Spatial
Effort in Bering Sea Fisheries for Unobserved Trips.” Working paper.
Haynie, A. “Addressing salmon bycatch through salmon bycatch quota trading among pollock
cooperatives.” NPFMC Discussion Paper, January 2008.
Haynie short CV, September 2015
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