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Dive into the research topics where Mikkel Boel is active.

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Featured researches published by Mikkel Boel.


Physiological and Biochemical Zoology | 2014

The physiological basis of the migration continuum in brown trout (Salmo trutta).

Mikkel Boel; Kim Aarestrup; Henrik Baktoft; Torben Larsen; Steffen S. Madsen; Hans Malte; Christian Skov; Jon Christian Svendsen; Anders Koed

Partial migration is common in many animal taxa; however, the physiological variation underpinning migration strategies remains poorly understood. Among salmonid fishes, brown trout (Salmo trutta) is one of the species that exhibits the most complex variation in sympatric migration strategies, expressed as a migration continuum, ranging from residency to anadromy. In looking at brown trout, our objective with this study was to test the hypothesis that variation in migration strategies is underpinned by physiological variation. Prior to migration, physiological samples were taken from fish in the stream and then released at the capture site. Using telemetry, we subsequently classified fish as resident, short-distance migrants (potamodromous), or long-distance migrants (potentially anadromous). Our results revealed that fish belonging to the resident strategy differed from those exhibiting any of the two migratory strategies. Gill Na,K-ATPase activity, condition factor, and indicators of nutritional status suggested that trout from the two migratory strategies were smoltified and energetically depleted before leaving the stream, compared to those in the resident strategy. The trout belonging to the two migratory strategies were generally similar; however, lower triacylglycerides levels in the short-distance migrants indicated that they were more lipid depleted prior to migration compared with the long-distance migrants. In the context of migration cost, we suggest that additional lipid depletion makes migrants more inclined to terminate migration at the first given feeding opportunity, whereas individuals that are less lipid depleted will migrate farther. Collectively, our data suggest that the energetic state of individual fish provides a possible mechanism underpinning the migration continuum in brown trout.


Conservation Physiology | 2016

Phenotypic variation in metabolism and morphology correlating with animal swimming activity in the wild: relevance for the OCLTT (oxygen- and capacity-limitation of thermal tolerance), allocation and performance models

Henrik Baktoft; Lene Jacobsen; Christian Skov; Anders Koed; Niels Jepsen; Søren Berg; Mikkel Boel; Kim Aarestrup; Jon Christian Svendsen

Combining physiological and morphological measures in the laboratory with registrations of detailed measures of field activity, we tested the hypothesis that individual activity patterns correlate with individual metabolism and morphology as proposed by several conceptual models. We found no evidence indicating an effect of metabolism, whereas morphology correlated with several activity measures.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2015

An experimental field evaluation of winter carryover effects in semi-anadromous brown trout (Salmo trutta)

Jonathan D. Midwood; Martin Hage Larsen; Mikkel Boel; Kim Aarestrup; Steven J. Cooke

For semi-anadromous brown trout, the decision whether or not to smoltify and migrate to the sea is believed to be made at the end of the preceding summer in response to both local environmental conditions and individual physiological status. Stressors experienced during the fall may therefore influence their propensity to migrate as well as carry over into the winter resulting in mortality when fish face challenging environmental conditions. To evaluate this possibility, we artificially elevated cortisol levels in juvenile trout (via intracoelomic injection of cortisol in the fall) and used passive integrated transponder tags to compare their overwinter and spring survival, growth, and migration success relative to a control group. Results suggest that overwinter mortality is high for individuals in this population regardless of treatment. However, survival rates were 2.5 times lower for cortisol-treated fish and they experienced significantly greater loss in mass. In addition, less than half as many cortisol-treated individuals made it downstream to a stationary antenna over the winter and also during the spring migration compared to the control treatment. These results suggest that a fall stressor can reduce overwinter survival of juvenile brown trout, negatively impact growth of individuals that survive, and ultimately result in a reduction in the number of migratory trout. Carryover effects such as those documented here reveal the cryptic manner in which natural and anthropogenic stressors can influence fish populations. J. Exp. Zool. 323A: 645-654, 2015.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2012

Visibility conditions and diel period affect small-scale spatio-temporal behaviour of pike Esox lucius in the absence of prey and conspecifics

P. A. Nilsson; Henrik Baktoft; Mikkel Boel; Kristian Meier; Lene Jacobsen; E.M. Rokkjær; T. Clausen; Christian Skov

Pike Esox lucius in the absence of prey and conspecifics were shown to have the highest habitat-change activity during dusk and to decrease preference for complex habitats in turbid water. As the behaviours indicate routine responses in the absence of behavioural interactions, E. lucius spatio-temporal distributions should be directly affected and thereby more easily assessed and avoided by prey, with potential consequences for encounter rates.


Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2012

Seasonal and diel effects on the activity of northern pike studied by high-resolution positional telemetry

Henrik Baktoft; Kim Aarestrup; Søren Berg; Mikkel Boel; Lene Jacobsen; Niels Jepsen; Anders Koed; Jon Christian Svendsen; Christian Skov


Fisheries Management and Ecology | 2013

Effects of angling and manual handling on pike behaviour investigated by high-resolution positional telemetry

Henrik Baktoft; Kim Aarestrup; Søren Berg; Mikkel Boel; Lene Jacobsen; Anders Koed; Martin Wæver Pedersen; Jon Christian Svendsen; Christian Skov


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2014

Does cortisol manipulation influence outmigration behaviour, survival and growth of sea trout? A field test of carryover effects in wild fish

Jonathan D. Midwood; Martin Hage Larsen; Mikkel Boel; Niels Jepsen; Kim Aarestrup; Steven J. Cooke


Archive | 2012

Life history types and strategies: Case studies on brown trout (Salmo trutta) and alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus), involving physiological differences and interspecific interactions

Mikkel Boel; Anders Koed


Oikos | 2018

Incidence and phenotypic variation in alewife alter the ontogenetic trajectory of young-of-the-year largemouth bass

Mikkel Boel; Jakob Brodersen; Anders Koed; Henrik Baktoft; David M. Post


Archive | 2014

Skarv og fiskehejre æder mange ørreder i Hald Sø

Mikkel Boel; Anders Koed

Collaboration


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Anders Koed

Technical University of Denmark

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Henrik Baktoft

Technical University of Denmark

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Kim Aarestrup

Technical University of Denmark

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Christian Skov

Technical University of Denmark

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Lene Jacobsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Niels Jepsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Søren Berg

Technical University of Denmark

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