Phil Hickley
Environment Agency
21 Papers
255 Citations
Phil Hickley is an academic researcher from Environment Agency. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fishing & Fisheries management. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 21 publications. Previous affiliations of Phil Hickley include University of Leicester.
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Papers
•Book
Recreational fisheries: social, economic and management aspects.
Phil Hickley,Helena Tompkins +1 more
- 01 Jan 1998
TL;DR: Recreational fisheries: social, economic, and management aspects as mentioned in this paper, recreational fishery management aspects, recreational fisheries, social and economic management aspects, Recreational fisheries management aspects.
167
Fisheries for non-native species in England and Wales: angling or the environment?
Phil Hickley,S. Chare +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present case histories and show the potential impacts of these species to involve the effects of predation, competition, disease, hybridisation and habitat degradation, and a fully coordinated approach to the regulation of fish movements is being facilitated by a new database and the Environment Agency has reviewed the policies through which it regulates movements of fish into the wild.
159
Aquatic biodiversity and saline lakes: Lake Bogoria National Reserve, Kenya
David M. Harper,R. Brooks Childress,Maureen M. Harper,R. R. Boar,Phil Hickley,Suzanne C. Mills,Nickson Erick Otieno,Tony Drane,Ekkehard Vareschi,Oliver Nasirwa,Wanjiru E. Mwatha,Wanjiru E. Mwatha,Joanna P. E. C. Darlington,Xavier Escuté-Gasulla +13 more
TL;DR: The lake has high conservation value because of three bird species in particular – lesser flamingo, Cape teal and black-necked grebe – and is ecologically simple, with only one species dominating the phytoplankton – the cyanobacterium `spirulina', Arthrospira fusiformis.
The diet of largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides, in Lake Naivasha, Kenya
TL;DR: The largemouth bass in Lake Naivasha are generalized macro-predators, feeding principally on free-living animals of a kind most likely to be found in the littoral zones.
95
•Journal Article
Habitat degradation and subsequent fishery collapse in Lakes Naivasha and Baringo, Kenya
Phil Hickley,Mucai Muchiri,Rosalind Boar,Robert Britton,Christopher Adams,Nicholas Gichuru,David M. Harper +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed an agreed riparian owners' management plan which tackles issues such as water usage and protection of the C. papyrus margin in Lake Naivasha and Lake Baringo.