C
Christian Skov
Researcher at Technical University of Denmark
Publications - 125
Citations - 5029
Christian Skov is an academic researcher from Technical University of Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pike & Population. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 115 publications receiving 4260 citations. Previous affiliations of Christian Skov include Lund University & University of Copenhagen.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Lake restoration: successes, failures and long‐term effects
Martin Søndergaard,Erik Jeppesen,Torben L. Lauridsen,Christian Skov,Egbert H. van Nes,R.M.M. Roijackers,E. H. R. R. Lammens,Rob Portielje +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated data from more than 70 restoration projects conducted mainly in shallow, eutrophic lakes in Denmark and the Netherlands and found that the strongest effects seemed to be obtained 4-6 years after the start of fish removal.
Journal ArticleDOI
Partial migration in fishes: causes and consequences
Ben B. Chapman,Kaj Hulthén,Jakob Brodersen,Per Anders Nilsson,Christian Skov,Lars-Anders Hansson,Christer Brönmark +6 more
TL;DR: It is argued that understanding the concept of partial migration is crucial for fisheries and ecosystem managers, and can provide information for conservation strategies, and also in an applied sense.
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To boldly go: individual differences in boldness influence migratory tendency
Ben B. Chapman,Kaj Hulthén,David R. Blomqvist,Lars-Anders Hansson,Jan-Åke Nilsson,Jakob Brodersen,P. Anders Nilsson,Christian Skov,Christer Brönmark +8 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that an extremely widespread personality trait in animals can have significant ecological consequences via influencing individual-level migratory behaviour, with bold individuals being more likely to migrate than shy fish.
Journal ArticleDOI
Partial migration in fishes: definitions, methodologies and taxonomic distribution.
Ben B. Chapman,Christian Skov,Kaj Hulthén,Jacob Brodersen,Per Anders Nilsson,L-A Hansson,Christer Brönmark +6 more
TL;DR: Partial migration is more widespread amongst fishes than previously thought, and given the array of techniques available to fish biologists to study migratory variation the future of the field looks promising.
Journal ArticleDOI
Condition-dependent individual decision-making determines cyprinid partial migration
TL;DR: The main conclusion is that individual decision-making is based on assessment of own condition which offers a mechanistic explanation to partial migration, which may be of high importance for understanding population responses to environmental variation as well as ecosystem dynamics and stability.