Biography:
Lauren Bailey obtained her Marine Sciences degree cum laude from Nelson Mandela University, South Africa in 2015. She then joined the physiology research group of Dr. Ben Smit and received her honor’s degree. The Smit laboratory moved to Rhodes University where Lauren Bailey obtained her MSc degree in Animal Sciences. Lauren Bailey is currently a doctoral candidate supervised by Dr. Warren Potts at the Ichthyology and Fisheries Science Department of Rhodes University. Her research interests focus on fish physiology and behavior, for which she has four peer-reviewed published manuscripts in counting.Lauren Bailey obtained her Marine Sciences degree cum laude from Nelson Mandela University, South Africa in 2015. She then joined the physiology research group of Dr. Ben Smit and received her honor’s degree. The Smit laboratory moved to Rhodes University where Lauren Bailey obtained her MSc degree in Animal Sciences. Lauren Bailey is currently a doctoral candidate supervised by Dr. Warren Potts at the Ichthyology and Fisheries Science Department of Rhodes University. Her research interests focus on fish physiology and behavior, for which she has four peer-reviewed published manuscripts in counting.
Title : By removing high performance aerobic scope phenotypes, capture fisheries may reduce the resilience of fished populations to thermal variability and compromise their persistence into the Anthropocene