The Modoc sucker (Catostomus microps) is a species that received legal protection in the United States based partially on concerns that anthropogenic environmental changes had restricted migration among populations and catalyzed hybridization with a congener, the Sacramento sucker (C. occidentalis). We applied eight microsatellite markers to samples of both species collected from throughout the range of Modoc suckers: two tributaries in the Pit River sub-basin and one tributary in the Goose Lake sub-basin. Modoc sucker populations in these three tributaries appeared to be largely isolated from one another: migration among Pit River tributaries appeared no greater than migration among sub-basins. Sacramento sucker populations appeared relati...
The Caddo Madtom, Noturus taylori, is endemic to three river drainages of the Ouachita Highlands in ...
Ecological generalists may contain a wealth of information concerning diversity, ecology, and geogra...
Ten microsatellite loci were characterized for 34 locations from roundtail chub (Gila robusta comple...
The Modoc sucker (Catostomus microps) is a species that received legal protection in the United Stat...
sucker Catostomus rimiculus, the Klamath largescale sucker Catostomus snyderi, the shortnose sucker ...
The species Oncorhynchus mykiss is characterized by a complex life history that presents a significa...
Hybridization among conspecifics in native and introduced habitats has important implications for bi...
Species ranges which span different geographic landscapes frequently contain cryptic species or popu...
A peripheral population of mountain sucker, Pantosteus jordani, located in the Black Hills of South ...
Much remains to be understood about the evolutionary history and contemporary landscape genetics of ...
As with many endangered, long-lived iteroparous fishes, survival of razorback sucker depends on a ma...
In the late 1940s, Rio Grande Sucker Pantosteus plebeius was reported in tributaries of the Gila Riv...
The endangered fountain darter Etheostoma fonticola is found only in the Comal and San Marcos rivers...
Unstable hybrid swarms that arise following the introduction of non-native species can overwhelm nat...
The Caddo Madtom, Noturus taylori, is endemic to three river drainages of the Ouachita Highlands in ...
Ecological generalists may contain a wealth of information concerning diversity, ecology, and geogra...
Ten microsatellite loci were characterized for 34 locations from roundtail chub (Gila robusta comple...
The Modoc sucker (Catostomus microps) is a species that received legal protection in the United Stat...
sucker Catostomus rimiculus, the Klamath largescale sucker Catostomus snyderi, the shortnose sucker ...
The species Oncorhynchus mykiss is characterized by a complex life history that presents a significa...
Hybridization among conspecifics in native and introduced habitats has important implications for bi...
Species ranges which span different geographic landscapes frequently contain cryptic species or popu...
A peripheral population of mountain sucker, Pantosteus jordani, located in the Black Hills of South ...
Much remains to be understood about the evolutionary history and contemporary landscape genetics of ...
As with many endangered, long-lived iteroparous fishes, survival of razorback sucker depends on a ma...
In the late 1940s, Rio Grande Sucker Pantosteus plebeius was reported in tributaries of the Gila Riv...
The endangered fountain darter Etheostoma fonticola is found only in the Comal and San Marcos rivers...
Unstable hybrid swarms that arise following the introduction of non-native species can overwhelm nat...
The Caddo Madtom, Noturus taylori, is endemic to three river drainages of the Ouachita Highlands in ...
Ecological generalists may contain a wealth of information concerning diversity, ecology, and geogra...
Ten microsatellite loci were characterized for 34 locations from roundtail chub (Gila robusta comple...