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Links and Information
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Foodbase Projects
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Oviposition and Egg Desiccation Studies
Foodwebs and Bioenergetics Studies
Measuring Primary Production in the Lees Ferry Reach
The BugFlow Experiment
Citizen Science Insect Monitoring
Hyporheic Anoxia in the Lees Ferry Reach
Downstream Recovery of the Foodbase Community in Several Colorado River Tailwaters
Drift and Food Availability Studies
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Papers and Presentations
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2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
- Rosi-Marshall et al., 2010, Short-term effects of the 2008 high-flow experiment on macroinvertebrates in the Colorado River below Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2010-1031, 28 p.
- Wellard-Kelly, 2010, Resource Composition and Macroinvertebrate Resource Consumption in the Colorado River Below Glen Canyon Dam. Master's Theses.
- McKinney et al., 2010, Macroinvertebrate drift in the tailwater of a regulated river below Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona. The Southwestern Naturalist
- Cross et al. 2010. Invasion and production of New Zealand mud snails in the Colorado River, Glen Canyon. Biol Invasions
- Short-Term Effects of the 2008 High-Flow Experiment on Macroinvertebrates in Colorado River Below Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona
- Basal Resources in Backwaters of the Colorado River Below Glen Canyon Dam—Effects of Discharge Regimes and Comparison with Mainstem Depositional Environments
2009
2003
2001
2000
1999
1998
- Stevens, L. E., J. P. Shannon, and D. W. Blinn. 1998. Colorado river benthic ecology in Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA: dam, tributary and geomorphological influences. Regulated Rivers.
- Blinn et al. 1998. Algal ecology in the tailwater stream communities: The Colorado River below Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona. J, Phycol. M, 734-740 (1998)
- Stevens et al. 1998. Chironomidae (Diptera) of the Colorado River, Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA, II: factors influencing distribution. Great Basin Naturalist: Vol. 58: No. 2, Article 2
1997
- Stevens, L. E., J. P. Shannon, and D. W. Blinn. 1997. Colorado River benthic ecology in Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA: dam, tributary and geomorphological influences. Regulated Rivers: Research and Management 13:129–149.
- Shaver et al. Effects of suspended sediment and desiccation on the benthic tailwater community in the Colorado River, USA. Hydrobiologia 357: 63–72, 1997.
- Stevens et al. 1997. Colorado River benthic ecology in Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA: Dam, tributary, and gomorphological influences. Regulated Rivers: Research and Management, Vol. 13, 129–149 (1997)
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Other Stuff
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The interaction of fish, foodbase, and temperature
Fish occupying warmer water have higher metabolic demands than individuals in cooler water, and if these demands increase concurrently with a seasonal decline in prey availability, then growth rates may be reduced. [2]
- Gammarus, blackflies, and midges fuel fish production below Glen Canyon Dam.
- Blackflies and midges respond positively to spring HFE's. Gammarus show little response to fall or spring HFEs.
- Mud Snails were introduced below Glen Canyon Dam around 1995.
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