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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 524

Critical uncertainties and research needs for the restoration and conservation of native lampreys in North America

We briefly reviewed the literature, queried selected researchers, and drew upon our own experience to describe some critical uncertainties and research needs for the conservation and restoration of native lampreys in North America. We parsed the uncertainties and research needs into five general categories: (1) population status; (2) systematics; (3) passage at dams, screens, and other structures;
Authors
Matthew G. Mesa, Elizabeth S. Copeland

Passage, survival, and approach patterns of juvenile salmonids at Little Goose Dam

No abstract available 
Authors
J.W. Beeman, A.C. Braatz, S.D. Fielding, H.C. Hansel, S.T. Brown, G.T. George, P.V. Haner, G.S. Hansen, D.J. Shurtleff

Olfactory sensitivity of Pacific Lampreys to lamprey bile acids

Pacific lampreys Lampetra tridentata are in decline throughout much of their historical range in the Columbia River basin. In support of restoration efforts, we tested whether larval and adult lamprey bile acids serve as migratory and spawning pheromones in adult Pacific lampreys, as they do in sea lampreys Petromyzon marinus. The olfactory sensitivity of adult Pacific lampreys to lamprey bile aci
Authors
T. Craig Robinson, Peter W. Sorensen, Jennifer M. Bayer, James G. Seelye

Pilot study to access the role of Ceratomyxa shasta infection in mortality of fall-run Chinook smolts migrating through the lower Klamath River in 2008

Apparent survival and migration rate of radio-tagged hatchery subyearling Chinook salmon released at Iron Gate Hatchery was monitored in the Klamath River to see if the timing of mortality coincided with observations of ceratomyxosis in re-captured coded wire tag cohorts. Despite rapid emigration, these relatively large (mean fork length 92 mm) smolts had a cumulative apparent survival to the estu
Authors
Scott Foott, Greg Stutzer, R. Fogerty, Hal Hansel, Steven Juhnke, John W. Beeman

Adult chinook salmon passage at Little Goose Dam in relation to spill operations

Spill patterns at Little Goose Dam in 2007 were modified in anticipation of a spillway weir installation intended to improve downstream passage of juvenile salmonids. However, in spill pattern was associated with reduced daily counts of adult salmon passing the dam. Consequently, the behaviors and upstream passage times of radio-tagged adult spring–summer Chinook salmon were evaluated in response
Authors
M.A. Jepson, C.C. Caudill, T.S. Clabough, C.A. Peery, J.W. Beeman, S. Fielding

Mapping and monitoring Mt. Graham Red Squirrel habitat with GIS and thematic mapper imagery

To estimate the Mt. Graham red squirrel (MGRS) population, personnel visit a proportion of middens each year to determine their occupancy (Snow in this vol.). The method results in very tight confidence intervals (high precision), but the accuracy of the population estimate is dependent upon knowing where all the middens are located. I hypothesized that there might be areas outside the survey boun
Authors
James R. Hatten, John L. Koprowski

Survival and migration behavior of juvenile salmonids at McNary Dam, 2006

During 2006, we used acoustic telemetry and a route-specific survival model (RSSM, Skalski et al. 2002) to estimate behavior, passage, and survival of juvenile salmonids during two different spill operations and diel periods at McNary Dam. An evaluation of 12-h versus 24-h spill was proposed for the spring migration period at McNary Dam. However, high river discharge did not allow for the 12-h spi