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Brett Albanese

Researcher at Georgia Department of Natural Resources

Publications -  16
Citations -  756

Brett Albanese is an academic researcher from Georgia Department of Natural Resources. The author has contributed to research in topics: Percina & Predation. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 15 publications receiving 700 citations. Previous affiliations of Brett Albanese include Virginia Tech & North Carolina State University.

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Sex-biased movement in the guppy (Poecilia reticulata)

TL;DR: Examination of the movement patterns of the guppy in the Arima river of Trinidad predicted that sexual asymmetry in reproductive investment would result in male-biased movement, and detected a positive relationship between body length and the probability of emigration for males and a significant bias for upstream movement by males.
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Ecological correlates of fish movement in a network of Virginia streams

TL;DR: Relationships between three attributes of movement and 15 ecological variables are examined in order to identify factors that influence fish movement and predict how populations respond to environmental change.
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Does mobility explain variation in colonisation and population recovery among stream fishes

TL;DR: The results indicate that recovery of the overall assemblage does not imply recovery of each component species and that populations of species that are rare and less mobile will recover more slowly and will be more vulnerable to extinction in systems where chemical spills, hydrological alteration, extreme droughts and other impacts are frequent.
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Night feeding by guppies under predator release: effects on growth and daytime courtship

TL;DR: The findings support the view that evaluations of predator effects on life histories should consider potential predator-caused alterations in size-specific changes in reproductive behavior and growth.
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Designing Mark–Recapture Studies to Reduce Effects of Distance Weighting on Movement Distance Distributions of Stream Fishes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used distance weighting as a function of recapture section length in an unbranching stream and found that increasing the length of the recapture sections significantly increased the number of fish moving.