This report documents findings from an instream flow assessment conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) on Beaver Dam Wash in Mohave County, Arizona. The assessment, which focused on resources located at the mouth of Beaver Dam Wash from 1991 through 1994, provides a scientific basis for relating flowdependent resources to streamflow levels. Natural resource values, methods of data collection and analysis, and flow requirements are presented in this report
Utahns are expressing a rapidly growing interest in protecting and enhancing instream flows for outd...
The Colorado River and its tributaries support more than 35 million people and irrigate more than fo...
Channelization of the Greenwater River has resulted in a loss of habitat for Chinook salmon, a speci...
Water, one of the major resources of the western lands, controls the economy and expansion of the co...
In the semiarid and arid western United States, it is important to understand the potential effects ...
As the remaining water resources in river basins around the world are appropriated for human uses, i...
Beaver dam-building activities lead to a cascade of hydrologic, geomorphic, and ecologic feedbacks t...
The ecological impact of beavers on a stream in the southwestern United States was investigated to d...
From the Proceedings of the 1983 Meetings of the Arizona Section - American Water Resources Assn. an...
The Nature Conservancy and a team of 14 academic partners (the project team) received funding from t...
For centuries river management and land use actions in North America have caused widespread stream d...
Water is one of the most important and limited resources in regions with little rainfall. As populat...
The North American Beaver (Castor canadensis) used to span nearly the entirety of North America but ...
Natural beaver ponds in beaver impacted streams help connect the stream to the floodplain and shape ...
The Western United States can best be described as a vast, varying land, with the high plains to the...
Utahns are expressing a rapidly growing interest in protecting and enhancing instream flows for outd...
The Colorado River and its tributaries support more than 35 million people and irrigate more than fo...
Channelization of the Greenwater River has resulted in a loss of habitat for Chinook salmon, a speci...
Water, one of the major resources of the western lands, controls the economy and expansion of the co...
In the semiarid and arid western United States, it is important to understand the potential effects ...
As the remaining water resources in river basins around the world are appropriated for human uses, i...
Beaver dam-building activities lead to a cascade of hydrologic, geomorphic, and ecologic feedbacks t...
The ecological impact of beavers on a stream in the southwestern United States was investigated to d...
From the Proceedings of the 1983 Meetings of the Arizona Section - American Water Resources Assn. an...
The Nature Conservancy and a team of 14 academic partners (the project team) received funding from t...
For centuries river management and land use actions in North America have caused widespread stream d...
Water is one of the most important and limited resources in regions with little rainfall. As populat...
The North American Beaver (Castor canadensis) used to span nearly the entirety of North America but ...
Natural beaver ponds in beaver impacted streams help connect the stream to the floodplain and shape ...
The Western United States can best be described as a vast, varying land, with the high plains to the...
Utahns are expressing a rapidly growing interest in protecting and enhancing instream flows for outd...
The Colorado River and its tributaries support more than 35 million people and irrigate more than fo...
Channelization of the Greenwater River has resulted in a loss of habitat for Chinook salmon, a speci...