Evidence Linking Delayed Mortality of Snake River Salmon to Their Earlier Hydrosystem Experience
- 1 February 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in North American Journal of Fisheries Management
- Vol. 22 (1), 35-51
- https://doi.org/10.1577/1548-8675(2002)022<0035:eldmos>2.0.co;2
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stress Indices in Migrating Juvenile Chinook Salmon and Steelhead of Wild and Hatchery Origin before and after Barge TransportationTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 2000
- A Coordinated Research Plan for Estuarine and Ocean Research on Pacific SalmonFisheries, 2000
- Reanalysis and Interpretation of 25 Years of Snake–Columbia River Juvenile Salmonid Survival StudiesNorth American Journal of Fisheries Management, 2000
- Abundance and Distribution of Northern Squawfish, Walleyes, and Smallmouth Bass in John Day Reservoir, Columbia RiverTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1991
- Metabolic Cost of Acute Physical Stress in Juvenile SteelheadTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1987
- Multiple Acute Disturbances Evoke Cumulative Physiological Stress Responses in Juvenile Chinook SalmonTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1986
- Cumulative stress-induced mortality of gizzard shad in a southeastern U.S. reservoirEnvironmental Biology of Fishes, 1985
- Criteria for adaptation of salmonids to high salinity seawater in FranceAquaculture, 1982
- Influence of Time and Size at Release of Juvenile Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) on Returns at MaturityCanadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 1982
- Delayed Migrations of Yearling Chinook Salmon Since Completion of Lower Monumental and Little Goose Dams on the Snake RiverTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1976