Figure 2.  The crew of two purse seining boats.  This team is composed of two different crews (each is enclosed in a rounded box) from two different purse seining ships which, nonetheless, fish together quite often.  Each crew member is represented by a shape with no line underneath.  (Shapes with lines underneath are included to provide links to other crews and other relevant kin.)  Numbered shapes represent individuals which appear on more than one diagram (see Figures 3-12).  Filled in shapes represent residents of Vindö, partially filled shapes represent individuals who are resident on the island for significant periods of time or who have close relatives on the island, unfilled shapes represent crew members who are not residents of Vindö and who have no other connection to the island.  The small dot above a triangle represents the fact that the individual is an owner of the respective boat.  Other symbols entail standard kinship notation:  traingles represent males, circles represent females, vertical lines represent consanguineal relations (parents above, offspring below), thicker and dashed horizontal lines represent affinal relations (marriage).  Not all kinship links are shown.

Figure 3.  The crew of a bottom-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs a bottom-trawler.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.


Figure 4.  The crew of a pair-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs one ship of the pair-trawling team in residence on Vindö.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.

Figure 5.  The crew of a bottom-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs a bottom-trawler.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.  This pair of owners were simply good friends who had fished together in the past, and went in together on a boat of their own.

Figure 6.   The crew of a bottom-trawling boat. This team owns and runs a bottom-trawler.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.


Figure 7.   The crew of a bottom-trawling boat. This team owns and runs a bottom-trawler.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.

Figure 8.  The crew of a bottom-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs a bottom-trawler.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.

Figure 9.  The crew of a bottom-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs a bottom-trawler.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.  This configuration is somewhat unique in that the father is retired but maintains a financial interest in the boat.

Figure 10.  The crew of a bottom-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs a bottom-trawler.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.

Figure 11.  The crew of a bottom-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs a trawler which is the largest ship from the island which engages strictly in bottom-trawling.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.

Figure 12.  The crew of a pair-trawling boat.  This team owns and runs one boat of the island’s pair-trawling team.  See Figure 2 for explanation of symbols.