M
Michael R. Donaldson
Researcher at Carleton University
Publications - 56
Citations - 3809
Michael R. Donaldson is an academic researcher from Carleton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oncorhynchus & Population. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 56 publications receiving 3102 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael R. Donaldson include University of British Columbia & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Predatory journals: no definition, no defence
Agnes Grudniewicz,David Moher,Kelly D. Cobey,Gregory L. Bryson,Samantha Cukier,Kristiann Allen,Clare L Ardern,Lesley Balcom,Tiago Barros,Monica Berger,Jairo Buitrago Ciro,Lucia Cugusi,Michael R. Donaldson,Matthias Egger,Ian D. Graham,Matt Hodgkinson,Karim M. Khan,Mahlubi Mabizela,Andrea Manca,Katrin Milzow,Johann Mouton,Marvelous Muchenje,Tom Olijhoek,Alexander Ommaya,Bhushan Patwardhan,Deborah Poff,Laurie Proulx,Marc A. Rodger,Anna Severin,Michaela Strinzel,Mauro Sylos-Labini,Robyn Tamblyn,Marthie van Niekerk,Jelte M. Wicherts,Manoj M. Lalu +34 more
TL;DR: Leading scholars and publishers from ten countries have agreed a definition of predatory publishing that can protect scholarship that took 12 hours of discussion, 18 questions and 3 rounds to reach.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cold shock and fish
TL;DR: This review synthesizes the sublethal physiological and behavioural consequences of cold-shock stress on fishes, identifies natural and anthropogenic sources ofcold shock, discusses the benefits of cold shock to fisheries science and describes mitigation and management efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI
The physiological consequences of catch‐and‐release angling: perspectives on experimental design, interpretation, extrapolation and relevance to stakeholders
Steven J. Cooke,Michael R. Donaldson,Constance M. O'Connor,Graham D. Raby,Robert Arlinghaus,Andy J. Danylchuk,Kyle C. Hanson,Scott G. Hinch,Timothy Clark,David A. Patterson,Cory D. Suski +10 more
TL;DR: The argument is presented that even if it is difficult to demonstrate strong links to mortality or other fitness measures, let alone population-level impacts of catch-and-release, there remains merit in using physiological tools as objective indicators of fish welfare, which is an increasing concern in recreational fisheries.
Journal ArticleDOI
Validation of reflex indicators for measuring vitality and predicting the delayed mortality of wild coho salmon bycatch released from fishing gears
Graham D. Raby,Michael R. Donaldson,Scott G. Hinch,David A. Patterson,Andrew G. Lotto,David Robichaud,Karl K. English,William G. Willmore,Anthony P. Farrell,Michael W. Davis,Steven J. Cooke +10 more
TL;DR: Radio telemetry was used to monitor migration success of 50 endangered coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch following incidental capture in an aboriginal beach seine fishery in the lower Fraser River (Canada), and this is the first validation of RAMP in a wild setting.
Book ChapterDOI
Stress Indicators in Fish
TL;DR: Understanding of how absolute levels of indicators relate to stressor severity and recovery to date remains limited, and how accurately indicators characterize stress in wild populations naturally exposed to stressors is still an evolving discussion.