Harbor Electronic Publishing
On the East End: The Last Best Times of a Long Island Fishing Community
On the East End: The Last Best Times of a Long Island Fishing Community
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Author: Clarence Hickey
Publisher: Harbor Electronic Publishing
Published: 07/17/2015
Pages: 188
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.57lbs
Size: 9.02h x 5.98w x 0.40d
ISBN: 9780974020129
About the Author
Clarence Hickey holds a Master of Science degree in marine biology from Long Island University. His master's thesis research studied the blood physiology of fish from Long Island's estuarine waters, and was published in part in the New Your Fish and Game Journal in 1976, and in the Transactions of the American Fisheries Society in 1983. Clarence lived in Amagansett during 1970-1975 when he worked as a marine biologist on the staff of the New Your Ocean Science Laboratory on Montauk. While at the Laboratory, Clarence worked with several local Baymen to study the marine fishes of the East End and, together, they authored several papers on the natural history of the fishes in the Fish and Game Journal. In 1983, Clarence and Bayman Jimmy Lester published a paper in the Fish and Game Journal that annotated the presence and seasonal abundance of 102 fish species caught in Jimmy's trap nets in Fort Pond Bay during 1970-1978. In 1998, they updated that list of fishes to 108 species through 1981. In the early and mid-1970s, Clarence spent much time at sea aboard many vessels, including the NOAA Research Vessel Albatross IV, stationed in Woods Hole, MA. During his time on the East End, Clarence was a member of the East Hampton Town Baymen's Association and a shareholder in the East Hampton Town Seafood Producers Cooperative. Clarence is a member of several scientific societies and associations, includ-ing the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Sigma Xi The Scien-tific Research Society, the American Fisheries Society, and the American Institute of Fishery Research Biologists. He has more than 150 publications in scientific and conservation journals, magazines, newsletters, technical and government reports, and newspapers. Clarence was a contributing author to The East Hampton Star for many years in the 1980s and 1990s. He served in the U.S. Army Medical Service as a hospital medical laboratory specialist during the Vietnam era. Clarence was a member, elder, and head usher at the Amagansett Presbyterian Church. He now lives in Rockville, MD, with wife Mary, also a marine biologist and teacher. They have two daughters living in Virginia and Arizona.
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