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Publications

Below is a list of available CRRL peer reviewed and published science.

Filter Total Items: 524

Movement of bull trout in the upper Jarbidge River watershed, Idaho and Nevada, 2008-09--A supplement to Open-File Report 2010-1033

We monitored bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) in 2008 and 2009 as a continuation of our work in 2006 and 2007, which involved the tagging of 1,536 bull trout with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags in the East Fork Jarbidge River and West Fork Jarbidge River and their tributaries in northeastern Nevada and southern Idaho. We installed PIT tag interrogation systems (PTISs) at established
Authors
Carrie S. Munz, M. Brady Allen, Patrick J. Connolly

Contaminant loading in remote Arctic lakes affects cellular stress-related proteins expression in feral charr

The remote Arctic lakes on Bjørnøya Island, Norway, offer a unique opportunity to study possible affect of lifelong contaminant exposure in wild populations of landlocked Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus). This is because Lake Ellasjøen has persistent organic pollutant (POP) levels that are significantly greater than in the nearby Lake Øyangen. We examined whether this differential contaminant loa
Authors
Steve Wiseman, Even H. Jorgensen, Alec G. Maule, Mathilakath M. Vijayan

Project Planning for Cougar Dam during 2010

Cougar Dam is a 158 m-tall, rock fill dam located about 63 km east of Springfield, Oregon. Completed in 1963, the dam is owned and operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). It impounds Cougar Reservoir, which is 9.7 km long, has a surface area of 518 ha, and is predominately used for flood control. The pool elevation typically ranges from a maximum conservation pool of 515 m (1,690 ft)
Authors
Craig A. Haskell, Kenneth F. Tiffan

Synthesis of the effects to fish species of two management scenarios for the secretarial determination on removal of the lower four dams on the Klamath River

For decades the long-standing conflict in the Klamath River Basin over water and fish resources has persisted. In an effort to resolve these disputes, PacifiCorp and interested parties negotiated, wrote, and signed the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement (KHSA) in 2010, calling for the potential removal of the four lower dams on the Klamath River mainstem. The KHSA established a process kno
Authors
John Hamilton, Dennis W. Rondorf, Mark Hampton, Rebecca Quiñones, Jim Simondet, Terry Smith

Thiaminase activity and life history investigations in American shad in the Columbia River

American shad Alosa sapidissima fry were successfully transplanted from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast in 1871 and have subsequently proliferated. The Columbia River population is in the millions, yet few investigations have been conducted to better understand their life history, population dynamics, or potential impacts on other species. In 2007 and 2008 we captured American shad from the Colu
Authors
Lisa A. Wetzel, Michael J Parsley, Bjorn K. van der Leeuw, Kimberly A. Larsen

Growth characteristics and otolith analysis on age-0 American shad

Otolith microstructure analysis provides useful information on the growth history of fish (Campana and Jones 1992, Bang and Gronkjaer 2005). Microstructure analysis can be used to construct the size-at-age growth trajectory of fish, determine daily growth rates, and estimate hatch date and other ecologically important life history events (Campana and Jones 1992, Tonkin et al. 2008). This kind of i
Authors
Sally T. Sauter, Lisa A. Wetzel

Development of a bioenergetics model for age-0 American shad

Bioenergetics modeling can be used as a tool to investigate the impact of non-native age-0 American shad (Alosa sapidissima) on reservoir and estuary food webs. The model can increase our understanding of how these fish influence lower trophic levels as well as predatory fish populations that feed on juvenile salmonids. Bioenergetics modeling can be used to investigate ecological processes, evalua
Authors
Sally T. Sauter

Diet of juvenile and adult American shad in the Columbia River

The diet of juvenile and adult American shad Alosa sapidissima captured from various locations in the Columbia River was investigated during 2007 and 2008. Collection efforts in 2007 were restricted to fish collected from existing adult and juvenile fish collection facilities located at Bonneville Dam and to adult shad captured by angling downstream from Bonneville Dam. In 2008, we used gillnets,
Authors
Sally T. Sauter, J. Timothy Blubaugh, Michael J. Parsley

Thiaminase activity and life history investigations in American Shad in the Columbia River

American shad Alosa sapidissima fry were successfully transplanted from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast in 1871 and have subsequently proliferated. The Columbia River population is in the millions, yet few investigations have been conducted to better understand their life history, population dynamics, or potential impacts on other species. In 2007 and 2008 we captured American shad from the Colu
Authors
Lisa A. Wetzel, Michael J. Parsley, Bjorn K. van der Leeuw, Kimberly A. Larsen

Growth characteristics and Otolith analysis on Age-0 American Shad

Otolith microstructure analysis provides useful information on the growth history of fish (Campana and Jones 1992, Bang and Gronkjaer 2005). Microstructure analysis can be used to construct the size-at-age growth trajectory of fish, determine daily growth rates, and estimate hatch date and other ecologically important life history events (Campana and Jones 1992, Tonkin et al. 2008). This kind of i
Authors
Sally T. Sauter, Lisa A. Wetzel

Development of a bioenergetics model for age-0 American Shad

Bioenergetics modeling can be used as a tool to investigate the impact of non-native age-0 American shad (Alosa sapidissima) on reservoir and estuary food webs. The model can increase our understanding of how these fish influence lower trophic levels as well as predatory fish populations that feed on juvenile salmonids. Bioenergetics modeling can be used to investigate ecological processes, evalua
Authors
Sally T. Sauter

Verification of a ‘freshwater-type’ life history variant of juvenile American shad in the Columbia River

American shad are native to the Atlantic coast of North America and were successfully introduced to the Pacific coast in the 1870s. They are now more abundant in the Columbia River than are its native salmon. As in their native range, Columbia River American shad are anadromous and have been assumed to solely exhibit an ‘ocean-type’ life history, characterized by a short period of juvenile rearing
Authors
Lisa A. Wetzel, Kimberly A. Larsen, Michael J. Parsley, Christian E. Zimmerman