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Alan D. Pickering

Researcher at Freshwater Biological Association

Publications -  53
Citations -  5032

Alan D. Pickering is an academic researcher from Freshwater Biological Association. The author has contributed to research in topics: Brown trout & Salmo. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 53 publications receiving 4868 citations.

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Stress responses and disease resistance in salmonid fish: Effects of chronic elevation of plasma cortisol

TL;DR: It is shown, by means of intraperitoneal implantation of cortisol, that chronic elevation of plasma cortisol levels in the brown trout results in a dose-dependent increase in mortality due to common bacterial and fungal diseases.
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Recovery of the brown trout, Salmo trutta L., from acute handling stress: a time-course study

TL;DR: A minimum of 2 weeks was required for complete recovery and a return to normality in the response of the brown trout to a single, short incidence of handling stress.
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The effects of acute and chronic stress on the levels of reproductive hormones in the plasma of mature male brown trout, Salmo trutta L.

TL;DR: Chronic confinement for 1 month caused a significant elevation of plasma cortisol but suppressed the levels of plasma testosterone and 11-ketotestosterone in sexually mature male brown trout, and an acute handling stress for 1 hr elevated blood cortisol and ACTH levels and also suppressed circulating androgens.
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The deleterious effects of cortisol implantation on reproductive function in two species of trout, Salmo trutta L and Salmo gairdneri Richardson

TL;DR: The results suggest that prolonged elevation of plasma cortisol, to levels well within physiological range, can affect a wide range of reproductive parameters in both brown and rainbow trout.
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Effects of acute and chronic stress on the levels of circulating growth hormone in the rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss

TL;DR: The acute stress of handling followed by confinement for a period of 1 or 24 hr caused a typical stress response in rainbow trout (elevation of plasma ACTH and cortisol) and a significant reduction in the concentration of circulating growth hormone.