Restoration pulse flows from a California dam temporarily increase drifting invertebrate biomass concentration
J Environ Manage
.
2023 Jan 15;326(Pt A):116647.
doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116647.
Epub 2022 Nov 9.
Authors
Jasmine S Williamshen
1
,
Alison P O'Dowd
2
,
Kyle De Juilio
3
,
Nicholas A Som
4
,
Darren M Ward
5
,
Brian O Williamshen
6
Affiliations
1
Cal Poly Humboldt, Department of Environmental Science and Management, USA. Electronic address: js602@humboldt.edu.
2
Cal Poly Humboldt, Department of Environmental Science and Management, USA.
3
Yurok Tribe, Fisheries Program, USA.
4
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Arcata Fish and Wildlife Office, USA; Cal Poly Humboldt, Department of Fisheries Biology, USA.
5
Cal Poly Humboldt, Department of Fisheries Biology, USA.
6
University of California, Davis, Center for Watershed Sciences, USA.
PMID:
36368204
DOI:
10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116647
No abstract available
Keywords:
Functional flows; Reconciliation ecology; Resource subsidies; Restoration; Salmonids.
Publication types
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
MeSH terms
Animals
Biomass
California
Ecosystem
Invertebrates*
Rivers*