Bell M. Shimada

Dr.
Bell Masayuki Shimada
Born(1922-01-17)January 17, 1922
DiedJune 2, 1958(1958-06-02) (aged 36)
near Guadalajara, Mexico
Education
Known forStudy of Pacific Ocean tuna fishery
SpouseRae Shimada née Shimojima
ChildrenAllen Shimada (b. 1954), Julie Shimada (b. 1957)
Scientific career
FieldsFisheries science
Institutions

Bell Masayuki Shimada (January 17, 1922 - June 2, 1958) was an American fisheries scientist. He is noted for his study during the 1950s of tuna stocks in the tropical Pacific Ocean and its important effect on the development of the post-World War II tuna fishery on the United States West Coast.[1][2]

Biography

Early life

Bell Masayuki Shimada was born in Seattle, Washington, on January 17, 1922, to Japanese immigrant parents.[1] As a boy, he demonstrated an aptitude for mathematics and science. After graduating from Franklin High School, he attended the University of Washington, where he studied at the School of Fisheries.[1][2]

The United States entered World War II with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. Early in the war, concerns arose in the United States that Japanese-Americans might sympathize with Japan, leading to a program of internment of Japanese-Americans which involved "evacuating" them involuntarily from the United States West Coast and incarcerating them in inland concentration camps. This interrupted Shimada's studies when he was "evacuated" on April 27, 1942.[1] He was incarcerated at Minidoka in Idaho on April 29, 1942.[2][3]

Military service

In May 1943, Shimada was permitted to leave the camp and enlist in the United States Army as an infantryman[1][2] in the 442nd Regimental Combat Team.[2] After basic training at Camp Shelby in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, he was selected for Japanese language and military intelligence collection training at Camp Savage in Savage, Minnesota. In April 1944, he was transferred to the United States Army Air Forces and received three months of air intelligence training in Orlando, Florida. He then was transferred to Honolulu, Hawaii, where he served as a translator and interpreter until May 1945, when he was transferred to Guam, where he served as a radio traffic monitor until the surrender of Japan on August 15, 1945.[1][2]

In August 1945, Shimada moved to U.S. Army Air Forces headquarters in Tokyo to take part in the occupation of Japan. He collected and synthesized economic and infrastructure data on the effects of the strategic bombing of Japan until he was discharged from the military in February 1946.[1][2]

Fisheries science career

Bell M. Shimada (left) and Fred Cleaver examining skipjack tuna, circa 1951
Bell M. Shimada, circa 1957

Research for Supreme Commander for the Allied Forces

Remaining in Japan, Shimada accepted a civilian position as a fisheries biologist in the Natural Resources Section on the staff of the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (SCAP). His duties involved researching and analyzing Japanese fisheries activities and compiling and collating data on them. He played a major role in drafting SCAP directives to the Japanese government, particularly on whaling, and his first professional publication, Japanese Whaling in the Bonin Islands Area (United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Fishery Leaflet No. 248), published in 1947, was based on his studies and reports on whaling while he was in Japan.[1][2]

Leaving Japan in December 1946, Shimada returned to the University of Washington to resume his studies at the College of Fisheries. He also worked as a laboratory technician for the School of Fisheries and maintained the School's ichthyology collection. After graduating cum laude on December 20, 1947, and receiving his bachelor's degree, he remained at the School of Fisheries to pursue postgraduate studies, during which he worked as a laboratory assistant maintaining aquaculture facilities for the Atomic Energy Commission. In September 1948, he began his career with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, accepting a position in its Bureau of Fisheries.[1][2]

Pacific Ocean Fisheries Investigations

Shimada graduated from the University of Washington School of Fisheries postgraduate program with a Master of Science in Fisheries in December 1948, and the same month moved to Honolulu to work for the Fish and Wildlife Service's new Pacific Ocean Fishery Investigations (POFI) office.[1][2] Tuna stocks in the Pacific Ocean had come under increasing pressure since the end of World War II, and the Fish and Wildlife Service had created POFI to study the tuna fishery in the equatorial Pacific. POFI's first director, the influential fisheries scientist Oscar Elton Sette, arrived in Honolulu to take charge of POFI in 1949. Sette has been credited with pioneering modern fisheries science by integrating the biological study of fish and their life cycles and populations with oceanography and meteorology to develop an overall understanding not only of the biology of the fish themselves but also of the influence of the physical environment on fisheries and fluctuations in their abundance from year to year.[4][5] Sette organized and directed POFI according to this vision.[4][5]

Under Sette's guidance, Shimada worked with many accomplished fisheries scientists and oceanographers while at POFI, including Wilbert McLeod "Wib" Chapman, Roger Revelle, Milner Baily "Benny" Schaefer, and Sette himself, as well as young scientists who would become notable in their fields as their careers progressed, such as Townsend Cromwell, Fred Cleaver, Warren Wooster, Alan Tubbs, William Aron, Gerald Howard, Richard Hennemuth, Howard Yoshida, and Tom Hida.[1] The Fish and Wildlife Service assigned two research ships to support POFI, and Shimada served as a seagoing biologist, in charge of shipboard science watches and research.[1]

Shimada also took postgraduate courses while in Honolulu and began work on his Ph.D.[1] He left POFI in January 1951 and spent the rest of the year in Seattle taking doctoral courses at the School of Fisheries at the University of Washington.[1][2]

Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission

In February 1952, Shimada was assigned to the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC),[1][2] which was collocated with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Fish and Wildlife Service Bureau of Fisheries laboratory in La Jolla, California, and he cooperated professionally with those institutions on matters of mutual interest, sharing scientific ideas and manpower and cooperating in research. Working with Milner "Benny" Schaefer and Gerald Howard, Shimada conducted the tuna fishery research for which he is best known during his time with the IATTC and achieved national and international recognition when he began to publish his research on tuna spawning, distribution, and feeding patterns.[1][2] He received his doctorate from the University of Washington School of Fisheries in 1956,[1][2] and rose rapidly within the IATTC, serving as the IATTC's Senior Scientist from 1956 to 1958. Both at POFI and at IATTC, Shimada worked frequently with Townsend Cromwell, a physical oceanographer interested in ocean currents, on research into the distribution of tuna in the Pacific Ocean. Their cooperative work, following the principles of fisheries oceanography Sette, Shimada, Cromwell, and other members of Sette's team had pioneered at POFI, combined Cromwell's insights into the forces such as temperature gradients that drive currents with Shimada's findings regarding the availability of forage for the tunas, leading to useful research results for both men.[1]

In 1957, Shimada and Cromwell worked together on the distribution of tuna throughout the Pacific Ocean,[2] including a research ship cruise off Mexico's Clarion Island as part of a project for the IATTC known as the Island Current Study.[1] Plans called for Shimada and Cromwell to make one more cruise to Clarion Island in 1958 aboard the Scripps Institution research ship Horizon to continue their research there before Shimada left the IATTC to take up a position as the first director of the Fish and Wildlife Service Bureau of Commercial Fisheries' new Eastern Pacific Tuna Investigations office in July 1958.[1]

Death

Making their way to Acapulco, Mexico, to join their research team for the 1958 Clarion Island cruise, Shimada and Cromwell boarded Aeronaves de México Flight 111, a Lockheed L-749A Constellation, in Guadalajara, Mexico, on June 2, 1958, for a flight to Mexico City. Shortly after takeoff, the airliner crashed into La Latilla Mountain, only 16 kilometers (10 miles) from Guadalajara Airport, killing all 45 people on board in what at the time was Mexico's deadliest aviation accident.[1][2][6]

Personal life

Allen and Julie Shimada, at the commissioning ceremony for the ship named for their father, NOAAS Bell M. Shimada (R 227), in 2010.

While working with POFI in Hawaii between 1948 and 1952, Shimada met and married the former Rae M. Shimojima,[1] who was working as Sette's secretary at the time.[2] They had a son, Allen, born in 1954, and a daughter, Julie, born in 1957.[1] Allen Shimada later became a fisheries scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Marine Fisheries Service.[7]

Commemoration

NOAAS Bell M. Shimada (R 227)

Although Shimada died at the age of 36 and his fisheries science career lasted only 12 years, at the time of his death the fisheries science community already viewed his contributions as so significant to both the scientific understanding of the Pacific tuna fishery and to the post-World War II development of that fishery on the U.S. West Coast that the Proceedings from the Symposium on "The Changing Pacific Ocean in 1957 and 1958" were dedicated to him,[1][8] as well as to Townsend Cromwell.[8] The dedication read:

This Symposium is dedicated to Townsend Cromwell and Bell M. Shimada, associates in research of many of the participants in this Symposium, who lost their lives, June 2, 1958, in an airplane crash near Guadalajara, Mexico, while en route to join the research vessel Horizon to make further observations on the changing conditions in 1958."[8]

The Shimada Seamount in the Pacific Ocean southwest of Baja California at 16°52′N 117°31′W / 16.867°N 117.517°W / 16.867; -117.517 (Shimada Seamount) is named for Shimada.[1][9]

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research ship NOAAS Bell M. Shimada (R 227) is named in honor of Shimada.[2][7] A team of students from Marina High School in Marina, California, that suggested the name won a regional NOAA contest to name the vessel.[2][7] In a speech at the ship's launching ceremony on September 26, 2008, Shimada's daughter Julie said, "I hope the Bell M. Shimada is a lasting testament that no life is too short, no career too brief, no contribution too small, to make a difference."[2] The ship was commissioned into the NOAA fleet on August 25, 2010.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y preserveamerica.noaa.gov Bell Masayuki Shimada (1922-1958)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t nvcfoundation.org "NOAA Honors Nisei with Launch of Fisheries Vessel 'Bell M. Shimada,'" Japanese American Veterans Association, December 2008, Volume 58, Issue 11.
  3. ^ "Japanese American Internee Data File: Masauki [sic] Shimada". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved August 18, 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Powell, Patricia, Fishery Bulletin, National Marine Fisheries Service, Volume 70, Number 3, July 1972, pages 525-535, in aifrb.org AIFRB-Biographies-web.pdf" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-12-20. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  5. ^ a b "Kendall, Arthur W., Jr., and Gary J. Duker, "The development of recruitment fisheries oceanography in the United States," Fisheries Oceanography 7:2, pp. 69-88, 1998" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-12-20. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  6. ^ Aviation Safety Network Accident Description
  7. ^ a b c d .noaanews.noaa.gov "NOAA Commissions New Research Ship Bell M. Shimada," 25 August 2010.
  8. ^ a b c ""Dedication" in Sette, Oscar Elton, and John D. Isaacs, eds., Part II: Symposium on "The Changing Pacific Ocean in 1957 and 1958," Rancho Santa Fe, California, June 2-4, 1958" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-08-03. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  9. ^ earthref.org Seamount Catalog: Shimada Seamount

Read other articles:

Para el licor, véase Calvados (licor). Calvados Departamento BanderaEscudo Coordenadas 49°02′00″N 0°15′00″E / 49.033333333333, 0.25Capital CaenEntidad Departamento • País  Francia • Número 14 • Región Normandía • Prefectura Caen • Subprefecturas BayeuxLisieuxVirePresidente del Consejo Anne d'Ornano (UDF)Subdivisiones Distritos 4Cantones 49Comunas 706Superficie Puesto 9.º • Total 5548 km²Población (2012) Pue...

 

Kuda sebagai hewan pikul. Hewan pikul atau binatang pengangkut adalah hewan pekerja yang dipergunakan oleh manusia sebagai kendaraan pengangkut barang dengan meletakkan beban di punggung hewan. Banyak jenis ungulata merupakan hewan pikul tradisinal, di antaranya adalah gajah, unta, yak, rusa kutub, kambing, kerbau dan llama, dan banyak dari Equidae (keluarga kuda) terdomestikasi. Hewan pikul lainnya yang tidak konvensional adalah anjing yang dibawa dalam pendakian untuk membawa air atau makan...

 

Jennifer AnistonAniston di premiere He's Just Not That Into You, 2 Februari 2009LahirJennifer Joanna Aniston11 Februari 1969 (umur 55) Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California, ASKebangsaan Amerika SerikatNama lainJennifer Aniston, JennyPekerjaanPemeran, produser, sutradaraTahun aktif1987–sekarangSuami/istriBrad Pitt (2000–2005)Justin Theroux (2015-2017)Orang tuaJohn AnistonNancy Dow Jennifer Joanna Aniston (lahir 11 Februari 1969) adalah seorang pemeran berkebangsaan Amerika...

Radio station in Svalbard, NorwayIsfjord RadioRadio stationIsfjord RadioCoordinates: 78°03′08″N 13°36′04″E / 78.05222°N 13.60111°E / 78.05222; 13.60111CountryNorwayRegionSvalbardIslandSpitsbergenLand areaNordenskiöld LandEstablished13 November 1933 (1933-11-13)Founded byNorwegian Polar InstitutePopulation • Total0Time zoneUTC+1 (Central European Time) • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (Central European Summer Time)Postal code9172P...

 

Duje redirects here. For the song by Albina Kelmendi, see Duje (song). This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Saint Domnius – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) DomniusSaint Domnius holding the city of SplitBishop and Mart...

 

I-364 redirects here. For the Imperial Japanese Navy submarine, see Japanese submarine I-364. State highway in eastern Missouri Route 364Page Avenue FreewayMO 364 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by MoDOTLength21.384 mi[1] (34.414 km)Existed2003–presentMajor junctionsWest end I-64 / US 40 / US 61 / Route N in Lake St. LouisMajor intersections Route 94 from St. Peters to St. Charles Route 141 in Creve CoeurEast&...

Синелобый амазон Научная классификация Домен:ЭукариотыЦарство:ЖивотныеПодцарство:ЭуметазоиБез ранга:Двусторонне-симметричныеБез ранга:ВторичноротыеТип:ХордовыеПодтип:ПозвоночныеИнфратип:ЧелюстноротыеНадкласс:ЧетвероногиеКлада:АмниотыКлада:ЗавропсидыКласс:Пт�...

 

Antonio Selvi, medaglia di Giovan Battista Fagiuoli, 1740 circa Giovan Battista Fagiuoli (Firenze, 24 giugno 1660 – 1742) è stato uno scrittore, poeta e drammaturgo italiano. Indice 1 Biografia 2 Opere 3 Epigramma satirico per i Medici, signori di Firenze 4 Note 5 Bibliografia 6 Altri progetti 7 Collegamenti esterni Biografia La Basilica di San Lorenzo (esterno) Studiò letteratura e divenne uno dei più faceti e allegri poeti estemporanei della sua epoca. Fu tenuto in un certo riguardo da...

 

School in Bath, Somerset, EnglandCity of Bath Technical SchoolAddressBrougham Hayes, Lower Oldfield ParkBath, SomersetEnglandCoordinates51°22′51″N 2°21′37″W / 51.3808°N 2.3603°W / 51.3808; -2.3603InformationMottoNisi Dominus Frustra(Unless the lord is with us our efforts are in vain)Establishedc. 1896 (adult evening classes), 1927 as a Junior SchoolClosed1973SpecialistTechnology & SciencesHead teacherF.T. Naylor (1970)Staff(in 1970) H.J. Alvis; A.J. Bi...

Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento baseball non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso delle fonti. Stati Uniti Sport Baseball Federazione USA Baseball Confederazione COPABE World Baseball Classic Partecipazioni 4 (esordio: 2006) Miglior risultato 1º Giochi olimpici Partecipazioni 5 (esordio: 1992) Miglior risultato 1° Mondiali Partecipazioni 23 (esordio: 19...

 

1996 compilation album by Stevie WonderSong Review: A Greatest Hits CollectionCompilation album by Stevie WonderReleased1996/1998GenreR&B, soul, popLength127:59 (2CD): 78:48 (single disc edition)LabelMotownProducerStevie Wonder, Hank CosbyStevie Wonder chronology Conversation Peace(1995) Song Review: A Greatest Hits Collection(1996) At the Close of a Century(1999) Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllmusic (1996 version)[1]Allmusic (1998 version)[2] Song...

 

Sailing action Hiking technique demonstrated on a Laser Radial. In sailing, hiking (stacking or stacking out in New Zealand; leaning out or sitting out in United Kingdom) is the action of moving the crew's body weight as far to windward (upwind) as possible, in order to decrease the extent the boat heels (leans away from the wind). By moving the crew's weight to windward, the moment of that force around the boat's center of buoyancy is increased. This opposes the heeling movement of the wind ...

Stadium in Santa Barbara, California, US Harder StadiumSoccer HeavenAugust 2018Santa BarbaraLocation in the United StatesShow map of the United StatesSanta BarbaraLocation in CaliforniaShow map of CaliforniaFull nameMeredith Fieldat Harder StadiumFormer namesCampus Stadium(1966–1981)AddressStadium RoadLocationUniversity of California, Santa BarbaraCalifornia, U.S.Coordinates34°25′12″N 119°51′14″W / 34.42°N 119.854°W / 34.42; -119.854Public transitEl Coleg...

 

عبدالرحمن العبدالله الفيصل عبدالرحمن العبدالله الفيصل ابن عبدالعزيز ال سعود معلومات شخصية الميلاد القرن 20  مواطنة السعودية  عائلة آل سعود  الحياة العملية المهنة صاحب أعمال  تعديل مصدري - تعديل   الأمير عبد الرحمن العبد الله الفيصل بن عبد العزيز آل سعود[1&#...

 

Velocimetría de imagen La velocimetría de imagen de partículas (PIV) es un método óptico de visualización de flujo utilizado en educación[1]​ e investigación.[2]​[3]​[4]​[5]​[6]​ Se usa para obtener mediciones de velocidad instantáneas y propiedades relacionadas en fluidos. El fluido se siembra con partículas trazadoras que, para partículas suficientemente pequeñas, se supone que siguen fielmente la dinámica del flujo (el grado en que las part�...

SAIL Steel Plant at Bokaro Steel City, Jharkhand a supersize steel plant- The second biggest steel plant in India, which contributes 45% of SAIL's profit The Iron and Steel industry in India is among the most important industries within the country. India surpassed Japan as the second largest steel producer in January 2019.[1] As per worldsteel, India's crude steel production in 2018 was at 106.5 tonnes (MT), 4.9% increase from 101.5 MT in 2017, which means that India overtook Japan ...

 

American politician (born 1974) This article is about the American politician. For the former president of Venezuela, see Julián Castro (Venezuelan politician). Julián Castro16th United States Secretary of Housing and Urban DevelopmentIn officeJuly 28, 2014 – January 20, 2017PresidentBarack ObamaDeputyNani A. ColorettiPreceded byShaun DonovanSucceeded byBen Carson181st Mayor of San AntonioIn officeJune 1, 2009 – July 22, 2014Preceded byPhil HardbergerSucceeded byIvy Ta...

 

Church in Mexico City, MexicoRoyal Convent of Jesús María and Our Lady of MercyConvento Real de Jesús María y Nuestra Señora de la MercedThe church's exterior, 2012Royal Convent of Jesús María and Our Lady of Mercy19°25′55″N 99°07′42″W / 19.4320°N 99.1282°W / 19.4320; -99.1282LocationMexico CityCountryMexicoHistoryFounded1580 (1580) The Royal Convent of Jesús María and Our Lady of Mercy (Spanish: Convento Real de Jesús María y Nuestra Señor...

Australia netball international Caitlyn Nevins Personal informationFull name Caitlyn Nevins (née Strachan)Born (1987-06-01) 1 June 1987 (age 37) [1]Geelong, VictoriaHeight 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in) [1]School Echuca High SchoolUniversity La Trobe UniversityNetball career Playing position(s): WA, CYears Club team(s) Apps200x–200x Echuca United 2006–2011 Southern Saints 2009 Victorian Fury 2011 Canberra Darters 2012–2014 Victorian Fury 2012–2014 → Yar...

 

Korean-American aviator (1932–2022) In this Korean name, the family name is No. No Kum-sokNo in 1953Birth nameNo Kum-sokBorn(1932-01-10)January 10, 1932Shinko, Kankyōnan-dō, Korea, Empire of Japan(now Sinhung County, South Hamgyong Province, North Korea)DiedDecember 26, 2022(2022-12-26) (aged 90)Daytona Beach, Florida, U.S.Service/branch KPA Air Force KPA Naval ForceYears of service1949–1953RankSenior lieutenantBattles/warsKorean War No Kum-sokChosŏn'gŭl노금석Hancha盧今...