Patrick L Hudson, PhD
Patrick Hudson is a Scientist Emeritus based in Ann Arbor, MI.
Science and Products
Publications by this scientist
Filter Total Items: 39
The North American Benthological Society
No abstract available.
Authors
David D. Herlong, Patrick L. Hudson
Benthic community of the Savannah River below a peaking hydropower station
The Savannah River below Hartwell Dam, on the South Carolina-Georgia border, contains at least 206 benthic invertebrate taxa, even though this tailwater undergoes substantial daily fluctuations in water flow, temperature, and dissolved oxygen. Oligochaetes, chironomids, and amphipods dominate the community immediately below the dam. Farther downstream, larger organisms (i.e., Ephemeroptera, Tricho
Authors
Patrick L. Hudson, S. Jerrine Nichols
Food and feeding of fish in Hartwell Reservoir tailwater, Georgia-South Carolina
Food of silver redhorse (Moxostoma anisurum), redbreast sunfish (Lepomis auritus), green sunfish (L. cyanellus), and bluegills (L. macrochirus) was examined to determine whether or not these fish in the Hartwell Reservoir tailwater (Savannah River, Georgia-South Carolina) ate organisms entrained from the reservoir or displaced from the tailwater during water releases associated with the production
Authors
D. Hugh Barwick, Patrick L. Hudson
Science and Products
Publications by this scientist
Filter Total Items: 39
The North American Benthological Society
No abstract available.
Authors
David D. Herlong, Patrick L. Hudson
Benthic community of the Savannah River below a peaking hydropower station
The Savannah River below Hartwell Dam, on the South Carolina-Georgia border, contains at least 206 benthic invertebrate taxa, even though this tailwater undergoes substantial daily fluctuations in water flow, temperature, and dissolved oxygen. Oligochaetes, chironomids, and amphipods dominate the community immediately below the dam. Farther downstream, larger organisms (i.e., Ephemeroptera, Tricho
Authors
Patrick L. Hudson, S. Jerrine Nichols
Food and feeding of fish in Hartwell Reservoir tailwater, Georgia-South Carolina
Food of silver redhorse (Moxostoma anisurum), redbreast sunfish (Lepomis auritus), green sunfish (L. cyanellus), and bluegills (L. macrochirus) was examined to determine whether or not these fish in the Hartwell Reservoir tailwater (Savannah River, Georgia-South Carolina) ate organisms entrained from the reservoir or displaced from the tailwater during water releases associated with the production
Authors
D. Hugh Barwick, Patrick L. Hudson