Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 524

Migration behavior and dispersal of adult spring Chinook salmon released into Lake Scanewa on the upper Cowlitz River during 2005

During 2005, we conducted a radio-telemetry study to answer a number of basic questions about the migration behavior of adult Spring Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) released into the upper Cowlitz River watershed. We also conducted a pilot study of adult Coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) using radio-tags recovered from adult spring Chinook salmon. This data is included as an Appendix. O
Authors
R.W. Perry, Tobias J. Kock, M.A Kritter, Dennis W. Rondorf

Passage, survival, and approach patterns of radio-tagged juvenile salmonids at Little Goose Dam, 2006

No abstract available.
Authors
J.W. Beeman, A.C. Braatz, S.D. Fielding, J.M. Hardiman, C. E. Walker, A.C. Pope, T.S. Wilkerson, D.J. Shurtleff, R.W. Perry, T.D. Counihan

WFRC patrners: our extended family

For more than five decades the Western Fisheries Research Center (WFRC) has worked with partners to provide research findings to managers of aquatic resources. Those partners form an extended family, a network of clients, colleagues, co-investigators, and customers. Our partners include numerous clients in other Department of Interior bureaus such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Bu
Authors
P. Connolly, D. Elliot, M. Parsley, J. Winton

Validation of a Critical Assumption of the Riparian Habitat Hypothesis for White Sturgeon

No abstract available.
Authors
Bjorn K. van der Leeuw, Michael J. Parsley, Corey D. Wright, Eric E. Kofoot

Science for maintaining riverine ecosystems: Actions for the USGS identified in the workshop "Analysis of Flow and Habitat for Aquatic Communities"

Federal and state agencies need improved scientific analysis to support riverine ecosystem management. The ability of the USGS to integrate geologic, hydrologic, chemical, geographic, and biological data into new tools and models provides unparalleled opportunities to translate the best riverine science into useful approaches and usable information to address issues faced by river managers. In add
Authors
Kenneth E. Bencala, David B. Hamilton, James H. Petersen