Modeling the Effects of Stream Microhabitat on Group Size and Foraging Success of Juvenile Coho Salmon.
Date
2009-01-27Author
Hintz, William D.
Faust, Matthew
Banach, Mitchell
Advisor(s)
Lonzarich, David
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In 1966 coho salmon(Oncorhynchus kisutch)from the Columbia River in Washington were introduced into Michigan tributary streams of Lake Superior. Since then coho have spread throughout the Lake Superior drainage. The primary goal of this study was to quantify the effects of microhabitat on group size and foraging success of juvenile coho salmon in a natural system in northern Wisconsin.
Subject
Coho salmon--Behavior
Coho salmon--Ecology
Coho salmon--Reintroduction--Michigan
Coho salmon--Reintroduction--Wisconsin
Posters
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/31934Description
Color poster with text and images describing research conducted by William Hintz, Matthew Faust, and Mitch Banach, advised by David Lonzarich.
Part of
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Recreating the Social Environment of Salmon Beach: An Analysis of the Salmon Beach Community and Applications Within the Field of Urban Design
Brown, Alexander H. (2011-05-01)Salmon Beach is a community in Tacoma, Washington that remains relatively hidden and unheard of, even to the local population. To get to this community, one must first find the unmarked entrance, which looks more like an ... -
Water Quality Assessment for Salmon Production and the Salmon Products Facility at the St. Croix Indian Fischeries
Ondrus, Martin; Wikum, Douglas (1989-08-02)This report summarizes one year of study of water quality in Loon Creek and the Yellow River near Danbury in Burnett County, Wisconsin. Loon Creek, a tributary of the Yellow River, is the proposed site of an Atlantic salmon ... -
Examining the early life history of the coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) from a study of otolith microstructure
Duarte, Paulina; Morschauser, Tim; Fireizen, Yaron; Ruiz, Ernest; Brewer, Matthew T.; Hintz, William D.; Koslov, David (2007-05-01)Birth date can be an important correlate to evolutionary fitness because birth timing can profoundly influence growth and survival. As part of an ongoing study, we report here on birth date and growth patterns for two ...