Felicity Huntingford

Felicity Anne Huntingford FRSE (born 17 June 1948)[1] is an aquatic ecologist known for her work in fish behaviour.

Huntingford's research interests include the aggression in sticklebacks and the welfare of farmed fish.

She is the author and editor of several widely cited and reviewed books,[2][3] including the textbook The Study of Animal Behaviour.

Huntingford has served as president of the Fisheries Society of the British Isles,[4] the Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour, and the World Council of Fisheries Societies.

Huntingford was elected to the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1996 in the discipline of organismal and environmental biology.

Huntingford was awarded the 2001 Tinbergen Lecture by the Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.

[7] She also delivered the 2012 Fisheries Society of the British Isles (FSBI) Jack Jones Lecture.

[10] She was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in 2009.

"The relationship between anti-predator behaviour and aggression among conspecifics in the three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus Aculeatus".

"Modelling the proximate basis of salmonid life-history variation, with application to Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L.".

"Implications of domestication and rearing conditions for the behaviour of cultivated fishes".