Pages that link to "Item:Q47185"
From geokb
The following pages link to Theodore Kennedy, Ph.D. (Q47185):
Displayed 50 items.
- Brown trout in the Lees Ferry reach of the Colorado River—Evaluation of causal hypotheses and potential interventions (Q57632) (← links)
- Water clarity of the Colorado River—Implications for food webs and fish communities (Q58464) (← links)
- Native and nonnative fish populations of the Colorado River are food limited--evidence from new food web analyses (Q61055) (← links)
- Identification and evaluation of scientific uncertainties related to fish and aquatic resources in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon - summary and interpretation of an expert-elicitation questionnaire (Q61256) (← links)
- Basal Resources in Backwaters of the Colorado River Below Glen Canyon Dam-Effects of Discharge Regimes and Comparison with Mainstem Depositional Environments (Q63961) (← links)
- Short-Term Effects of the 2008 High-Flow Experiment on Macroinvertebrates in Colorado River Below Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona (Q64126) (← links)
- Comparisons of Water Quality and Biological Variables from Colorado River Shoreline Habitats in Grand Canyon, Arizona, under Steady and Fluctuating Discharges from Glen Canyon Dam (Q66871) (← links)
- A Dreissena Risk Assessment for the Colorado River Ecosystem (Q67089) (← links)
- Pulsed flows, tributary inputs, and food web structure in a highly regulated river (Q145273) (← links)
- Drought related changes in water quality surpass effects of experimental flows on trout growth downstream of Lake Powell reservoir (Q150179) (← links)
- Little bugs, big data, and Colorado River adaptive management: Preliminary findings from the ongoing bug flow experiment at Glen Canyon Dam (Q150727) (← links)
- The relation between invertebrate drift and two primary controls, discharge and benthic densities, in a large regulated river (Q155123) (← links)
- Water storage decisions will determine the distribution and persistence of imperiled river fishes (Q156490) (← links)
- Changes in prey, turbidity, and competition reduce somatic growth and cause the collapse of a fish population (Q156739) (← links)
- Hydropeaking intensity and dam proximity limit aquatic invertebrate diversity in the Colorado River Basin (Q157249) (← links)
- Partners in Science (Q226779) (← links)
- Rainbow Trout in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon (Q226833) (← links)
- Bat foraging ecology along the Colorado River in Grand Canyon (Q227049) (← links)
- Community Science in Grand Canyon (Q227090) (← links)
- Bug Flows: Improving Food Web Health on the Colorado River (Q227163) (← links)
- Is timing really everything? Evaluating Resource Response to Spring Disturbance Flows (Q227648) (← links)
- Invertebrate Drift Downstream of Colorado River Basin Dams (Q229635) (← links)
- Uncovering the Base of the Food Web: Primary Production Dynamics in the Colorado River (Q229652) (← links)
- Aquatic Insects (Q229736) (← links)
- High diet overlap between native small-bodied fishes and nonnative fathead minnow in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon, Arizona (Q236315) (← links)
- Building a better sticky trap: description of an easy-to-use trap and pole mount for quantifying the abundance of adult aquatic insects (Q236622) (← links)
- Barcodes are a useful tool for labeling and tracking ecological samples (Q237275) (← links)
- Flow management for hydropower extirpates aquatic insects, undermining river food webs (Q238295) (← links)
- A coupled metabolic-hydraulic model and calibration scheme for estimating of whole-river metabolism during dynamic flow conditions (Q239823) (← links)
- Food-web dynamics in a large river discontinuum (Q244281) (← links)
- Macroinvertebrate diets reflect tributary inputs and turbidity-driven changes in food availability in the Colorado River downstream of Glen Canyon Dam (Q244290) (← links)
- Air-water oxygen exchange in a large whitewater river (Q246167) (← links)
- Invasion and production of New Zealand mud snails in the Colorado River, Glen Canyon (Q248168) (← links)
- Ecosystem ecology meets adaptive management: food web response to a controlled flood on the Colorado River, Glen Canyon (Q251537) (← links)
- Macroinvertebrate oviposition habitat selectivity and egg-mass desiccation tolerances: Implications for population dynamics in large regulated rivers (Q253552) (← links)
- Spatial population structure of a widespread aquatic insect in the Colorado River Basin: Evidence for a Hydropsyche oslari species complex (Q253577) (← links)
- Food web controls on mercury fluxes and fate in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon (Q253713) (← links)
- Multiple stressors mediate the effects of warming on leaf decomposition in a large regulated river (Q255118) (← links)
- Bug flows: Don’t count your midges until they hatch (Q264573) (← links)
- Experimental reductions in sub-daily flow fluctuations increased gross primary productivity for 425 river kilometers downstream (Q266846) (← links)
- Net-spinning caddisfly distribution in large regulated rivers (Q269454) (← links)
- Applied citizen science in freshwater research (Q276944) (← links)
- Insectivorous bat foraging tracks the availability of aquatic flies (Diptera) (Q278994) (← links)
- U.S. Geological Survey Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center: Proceedings of the fiscal year 2023 annual reporting meeting to the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program (Q282750) (← links)
- Angel lichen moth abundance and morphology data (Q284502) (← links)
- Population connectivity of aquatic insects in a dam-regulated, desert river (Q285387) (← links)
- As the prey thickens: Rainbow trout select prey based upon width not length (Q286006) (← links)
- Colorado River Basin (Q291186) (← links)
- Warm water temperatures and shifts in seasonality increase trout recruitment but only moderately decrease adult size in western North American tailwaters (Q297172) (← links)
- Evaluating potential sources of variation in Chironomidae catch rates on sticky traps (Q299059) (← links)