This paper adapts Turing analysis and applies it to dynamic bioeconomic problems where the inter-
action of coupled economic and ecological dynamics over space endogenously creates (or destroys)
spatial heterogeneity. It also extends Turing analysis to standard recursive optimal control frame-
works in economic analysis and applies it to dynamic bioeconomic problems where the interaction
of coupled economic and ecological dynamics under optimal control over space creates a challenge
to analytical tractability. We show how an appropriate formulation of the problem reduces analysis
to a tractable extension of linearization methods applied to the spatial analog of the well known
costate/state dynamics. We illustrate the usefulness of our methods on bioeconomic applications, but
the methods have more general economic applications where spatial considerations are important. We
believe that the extension of Turing analysis and the theory associated with dispersion relationship
to recursive in?nite horizon optimal control settings is new.