Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 20
pro vyhledávání: '"Sean M. Naman"'
Autor:
Sean M. Naman, Kara J. Pitman, Dylan S. Cunningham, Anna Potapova, Shawn M. Chartrand, Matthew R. Sloat, Jonathan W. Moore
Publikováno v:
Ecological Solutions and Evidence, Vol 5, Iss 2, Pp n/a-n/a (2024)
Abstract Forestry is pervasive across temperate North America and may influence aquatic environmental conditions such as flows and temperatures, as well as important species such as Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.). While there have been many large
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/146c5be0f7f74af29a02106df2f69d26
Publikováno v:
Hydrobiologia. 849:1855-1869
Publikováno v:
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 79:223-233
Salmonids make flexible and adaptive trade-offs between foraging efficiency and predation risk that result in variable patterns of diel activity and habitat use. However, the following remains unclear: (1) how patterns differ among salmonid species;
Autor:
Jordan S. Rosenfeld, Sean M. Naman
Publikováno v:
River Research and Applications. 37:869-879
Autor:
Sean M. Naman, Seth M. White, J. Ryan Bellmore, Peter A. McHugh, Matthew J. Kaylor, Colden V. Baxter, Robert J. Danehy, Robert J. Naiman, Amy L. Puls
Publikováno v:
WIREs Water. 9
Autor:
Eva C. Enders, Ian G. Jowett, Eric O. Goodwin, Jason R. Neuswanger, Brett C. Eaton, Sean M. Naman, John W. Hayes, Jordan S. Rosenfeld
Publikováno v:
Fisheries. 45:605-613
Publikováno v:
North American Journal of Fisheries Management. 40:320-329
Publikováno v:
Freshwater Biology. 64:1613-1626
Quantitative habitat suitability models (HSMs) are frequently used to inform the conservation and management of lotic organisms, often in the context of instream flow management. Correlative statistical models relating hydraulic variables to habitat
Autor:
Jordan S. Rosenfeld, Sean M. Naman
Publikováno v:
River Research and Applications. 35:442-447
Sampling invertebrate drift in high‐gradient boulder‐bed channels or large turbulent rivers is challenging, because the traditional approach of driving stakes into the stream bed to secure drift nets may not work. We describe a simple method usin
Publikováno v:
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 74:1208-1217
The influence of stream channel structure on the production of prey for drift-feeding fish is not well understood. We quantified drift production, the entry rate per streambed area, and drift flux, the total export rate per channel unit, in three sec