Doctoral Theses
Ongoing Doctoral Theses:
Christopher Monk: Behavior-base vulnerability of fishes
Thilo Pagel: Costs and benefits of stocking practices
Daniel Hühn: Determinants of successful stocking in pike and grayling
Thomas Klefoth: Physiological and behavioural mechanisms of angling-induced selection
Malte Dorow: Social and economic importance of eel (Anguilla anguilla) angling in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Fiona Johnston: Population dynamical consequences of size-selective recreational fishing
Completed Doctoral Theses:
Katrin Daedlow (2014): Institutional economics analysis of German recreational fisheries systems
Ben Beardmore (2013): Behaviour of anglers on multiple spatial and temporal scales: an econometric approach
Josep Alós (2013): Fisheries-induced selection in marine coastal fish
Martin Stålhammar (2013): Catch & release impacts on predatory fish species
Matthias Emmrich (2012): Fish assemblages in European lakes – comparison of sampling methods and analysis of size structure
Silva Uusi-Heikkilä (2012): Experimental evolution of zebra fish (Danio rerio)
Costance O’Connor (2011): The ecology of stress: a multidisciplinary perspective on stress in wild centrarchid fishes (externe Betreuung, Carleton University)