DIANA SHARPE
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My first major finding was that R. argentea populations that had been subjected to fishing and Nile perch predation generally showed reductions in mean body size and length at maturity, and increases in size-specific reproductive investment, relative to unperturbed populations. These trends are consistent with global patterns of fisheries-induced change, and also with predictions from life history theory (Sharpe et al. 2012).
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  • HOME
  • Research
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