All Stories

  1. Fisheries sustainability: Perceptions from the ninth World Fisheries Congress
  2. Live and dead fish shed different amounts of intact cells: Implications for advancing environmental DNA methodologies
  3. A molecular specimen bank for contemporary and future study captures landscape-scale biodiversity baselines before Klamath River dam removal
  4. Editorial: Large-scale dam removal and ecosystem restoration
  5. Challenges of implementing a multi-agency monitoring and adaptive management strategy for federally threatened Chinook salmon and steelhead trout during and after dam removal in the Elwha River
  6. Initial responses of Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to removal of two dams on the Elwha River, Washington State, U.S.A.
  7. Prey Supply and Predation as Potential Limitations to Feasibility of Anadromous Salmonid Introductions in a Reservoir
  8. Leaf litter decomposition and detrital communities following the removal of two large dams on the Elwha River (Washington, USA)
  9. Growth performance of Rainbow Trout in reservoir tributaries and implications for steelhead growth potential above Skagit River dams
  10. A decision‐support framework for dam removal planning and its application in northern California
  11. Patterns, drivers, and a predictive model of dam removal cost in the United States
  12. Using eDNA metabarcoding to establish targets for freshwater fish composition following river restoration
  13. Toward a national eDNA strategy for the United States
  14. Applying intrinsic potential models to evaluate salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) introduction into main-stem and tributary habitats upstream from the Skagit River Hydroelectric Project, northern Washington
  15. Reconnecting the Elwha River: Spatial Patterns of Fish Response to Dam Removal
  16. Riverscape approaches in practice: perspectives and applications
  17. Dam Removal and River Restoration☆
  18. Shifting food web structure during dam removal—Disturbance and recovery during a major restoration action
  19. Environmental DNA is an effective tool to track recolonizing migratory fish following large‐scale dam removal
  20. Use of environmental DNA to detect the invasive aquatic plants Myriophyllum spicatum and Egeria densa in lakes
  21. Replacing hydropower with solar
  22. Evaluation of environmental DNA surveys for identifying occupancy and spatial distribution of Pacific Lamprey ( Entosphenus tridentatus ) and Lampetra spp. in a Washington coast watershed
  23. A Bayesian life-cycle model to estimate escapement at maximum sustained yield in salmon based on limited information
  24. Complexities, context, and new information about the Elwha River
  25. Conceptualizing Ecological Responses to Dam Removal: If You Remove It, What's to Come?
  26. Morphodynamic evolution following sediment release from the world’s largest dam removal
  27. Concentrations of environmental DNA (eDNA) reflect spawning salmon abundance at fine spatial and temporal scales
  28. Distribution and seasonal differences in Pacific Lamprey andLampetraspp eDNA across 18 Puget Sound watersheds
  29. Science partnership between U.S. Geological Survey and the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe—Understanding the Elwha River Dam Removal Project
  30. Increased sediment load during a large-scale dam removal changes nearshore subtidal communities
  31. Coastal habitat and biological community response to dam removal on the Elwha River
  32. Dam removal: Listening in
  33. Status and trends of dam removal research in the United States
  34. Seasonal variation exceeds effects of salmon carcass additions on benthic food webs in the Elwha River
  35. Influence of species, size and relative abundance on the outcomes of competitive interactions between brook trout and juvenile coho salmon
  36. Community for Data Integration 2015 annual report
  37. Dam Removal Information Portal (DRIP)—A map-based resource linking scientific studies and associated geospatial information about dam removals
  38. The rapid return of marine-derived nutrients to a freshwater food web following dam removal
  39. Large-scale dam removal on the Elwha River, Washington, USA: Fluvial sediment load
  40. Large-scale dam removal on the Elwha River, Washington, USA: Source-to-sink sediment budget and synthesis
  41. Reprint of: Large-scale dam removal on the Elwha River, Washington, USA: River channel and floodplain geomorphic change
  42. Rapid water quality change in the Elwha River estuary complex during dam removal
  43. Multiscale Analysis of River Networks using the R Package linbin
  44. 1000 dams down and counting
  45. Large-scale dam removal on the Elwha River, Washington, USA: River channel and floodplain geomorphic change
  46. A Legacy of Divergent Fishery Management Regimes and the Resilience of Rainbow and Cutthroat Trout Populations in Lake Crescent, Olympic National Park, Washington
  47. River turbidity and sediment loads during dam removal
  48. Costs of living for juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in an increasingly warming and invaded world
  49. The effects of drought and disturbance on the growth and developmental instability of loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.)
  50. Geographic Patterns of Fishes and Jellyfish in Puget Sound Surface Waters
  51. A riverscape perspective of Pacific salmonids and aquatic habitats prior to large-scale dam removal in the Elwha River, Washington, USA
  52. Growth, Morphology, and Developmental Instability of Rainbow Trout, Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout, and Four Hybrid Generations
  53. The Humpbacked Species Richness-Curve: A Contingent Rule for Community Ecology
  54. Establishing spatial trends in water chemistry and stable isotopes (δ15N and δ13C) in the Elwha River prior to dam removal and salmon recolonization
  55. Faunal assemblages and multi-scale habitat patterns in headwater tributaries of the South Fork Trinity River – an unregulated river embedded within a multiple-use landscape
  56. Species richness, equitability, and abundance of ants in disturbed landscapes
  57. Linking Habitat Quality with Trophic Performance of Steelhead along Forest Gradients in the South Fork Trinity River Watershed, California
  58. USGS River Ecosystem Modeling: Where Are We, How Did We Get Here, and Where Are We Going?
  59. Benthic Invertebrates and Periphyton in the Elwha River Basin: Current Conditions and Predicted Response to Dam Removal
  60. Influence of Dams on River-Floodplain Dynamics in the Elwha River, Washington
  61. Predicting Recolonization Patterns and Interactions Between Potamodromous and Anadromous Salmonids in Response to Dam Removal in the Elwha River, Washington State, USA
  62. Baseline Studies in the Elwha River Ecosystem Prior to Dam Removal: Introduction to the Special Issue
  63. Ant Community Composition Across a Gradient of Disturbed Military Landscapes at Fort Benning, Georgia
  64. Ecology in the information age: patterns of use and attrition rates of internet-based citations in ESA journals, 1997–2005
  65. Sprint Swimming Performance of Wild Bull Trout (Salvelinus confluentus)
  66. Interaction Assessment: A modeling tool for predicting population dynamics from field data
  67. Leaf fluctuating asymmetry, soil disturbance and plant stress: a multiple year comparison using two herbs, Ipomoea pandurata and Cnidoscolus stimulosus
  68. PROBLEMS WITH SAMPLING DESERT TORTOISES: A SIMULATION ANALYSIS BASED ON FIELD DATA
  69. Habitat disturbance and the diversity and abundance of ants (Formicidae) in the Southeastern Fall-Line Sandhills
  70. Photosynthesis and Fluctuating Asymmetry as Indicators of Plant Response to Soil Disturbance in the Fall‐Line Sandhills of Georgia: A Case Study Using Rhus copallinum and Ipomoea pandurata
  71. Developmental Instability in Rhus copallinum L.: Multiple Stressors, Years, and Responses
  72. Estimating disturbance effects from military training using developmental instability and physiological measures of plant stress
  73. Habitat disturbance and the diversity and abundance of ants (Formicidae) in the Southeastern Fall-Line Sandhills
  74. Differences in native soil ecology associated with invasion of the exotic annual chenopod, Halogeton glomeratus
  75. Fitting population models from field data
  76. Developmental Instability: An Appropriate Indicator of Plant Fitness Components?
  77. Ecological Effects of Ranching: A Six-Point Critique
  78. Effects of Drought on Desert Tortoise Movement and Activity