The ability to traverse barriers of high water velocity limits the distributions of many diadromous and other migratory fish species, and is central to effective fishway design. This dissertation provides a detailed analysis of volitional sprinting behavior of six migratory fish species (American shad Alosa sapidissima, alewife A. pseudoharengus, blueback herring A. aestivalis, striped bass Morone saxatilis , walleye Stizostedion vitreum, and white sucker Catostomus commersoni), against controlled water velocities of 1.5–4.5 m · s−1 in a large, open-channel flume. In Chapter 1, I develop models of maximum distance traversed ( Dmax) by fish ascending these flows, accounting for water velocity and other covariate effects. I then demonstrate t...
Fishes that swim upstream in rivers to spawn must navigate complex fluvial velocity fields to arrive...
Swimming behavior of Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) smolts affects transit time, route se...
Abstract: Central to the question of river connectivity is the question of fish swimming performance...
Migratory fishes are often confronted with zones of high velocity flow that must be traversed in ord...
The distance fish can swim through zones of high-velocity flow is an important factorlimiting the di...
We used electromyogram telemetry to examine swim speeds and passage success for 12 adult sockeye sal...
During the months of August and September 1957, a series of experiments were conducted at Bonneville...
How seasonal effects such as temperature increases and reduced lipid content affect the ability of a...
Sprinting behavior of free-ranging fish has long been thought to exceed that of captive fish. Here ...
Stream connectivity is necessary for the persistence and viability of migratory fish populations. Ho...
Fishways have been developed to restore longitudinal connectivity in rivers. Despite their potential...
Loss of habitat connectivity due to anthropogenic structures is among the greatest threats to freshw...
We used a swim chamber, flume, and large-scale fishway models to assess the swimming performance, be...
Migration is a commonly described phenomenon in nature that is often caused by spatial and temporal ...
Migration is a commonly described phenomenon in nature that is often caused by spatial and temporal ...
Fishes that swim upstream in rivers to spawn must navigate complex fluvial velocity fields to arrive...
Swimming behavior of Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) smolts affects transit time, route se...
Abstract: Central to the question of river connectivity is the question of fish swimming performance...
Migratory fishes are often confronted with zones of high velocity flow that must be traversed in ord...
The distance fish can swim through zones of high-velocity flow is an important factorlimiting the di...
We used electromyogram telemetry to examine swim speeds and passage success for 12 adult sockeye sal...
During the months of August and September 1957, a series of experiments were conducted at Bonneville...
How seasonal effects such as temperature increases and reduced lipid content affect the ability of a...
Sprinting behavior of free-ranging fish has long been thought to exceed that of captive fish. Here ...
Stream connectivity is necessary for the persistence and viability of migratory fish populations. Ho...
Fishways have been developed to restore longitudinal connectivity in rivers. Despite their potential...
Loss of habitat connectivity due to anthropogenic structures is among the greatest threats to freshw...
We used a swim chamber, flume, and large-scale fishway models to assess the swimming performance, be...
Migration is a commonly described phenomenon in nature that is often caused by spatial and temporal ...
Migration is a commonly described phenomenon in nature that is often caused by spatial and temporal ...
Fishes that swim upstream in rivers to spawn must navigate complex fluvial velocity fields to arrive...
Swimming behavior of Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) smolts affects transit time, route se...
Abstract: Central to the question of river connectivity is the question of fish swimming performance...