River herring (Alosa spp.) are anadromous fish that enter North American Atlantic coastal rivers and lakes each spring to spawn. Anthropogenic structures such as dams and tide gates serve as physical obstacles that limit river herring access to spawning habitat. This study examined the physical and ecological components affecting herring passage through a tide gate by applying a time-to-event analysis framework to multiple movement behaviors derived from telemetry data. Herring had higher passage success early in the season (78%) than later on (16%). Key behaviors that govern passage varied with diel period, tide, and flow direction through the gates. Furthermore, these behaviors shifted as the season progressed, consistent with the hypothe...
Passage of hydropower plants by upstream-migrating salmonid spawners is associated with reduced migr...
Fish are adapted to spawn where their larvae will be retained in, or transported to suitable juvenil...
The development of hydroelectric power production and the damming of water courses that ensues cause...
Land use planners have the challenge of incorporating biologically sound guidelines into development...
River herring, the collective name given to North American populations of Alewife (Alosa pseudoharen...
Tide gates, used to regulate tidal flow as part of land reclamation programmes, temporally block fis...
The behaviour of returning Salmo salar (Linnaeus, 1758) approaching, and attempting to pass low-head...
Graduation date: 2011Tidal marshlands in the upper estuary ecotone provide essential habitat for\ud ...
Hydropower dams block migration routes and disrupt longitudinal connectivity in rivers, thereby posi...
Three-hundred adult trout were caught between 0.5 and 6.0 km upstream from tide gates in the River S...
Tide gates are one-way doors integrated into dyke systems that prevent saltwater intrusion to agricu...
The range of river herring (A. pseudoharengus and A. aestivalis) is much smaller now than historical...
In an effort to restore populations of migratory salmonids on the Columbia River, attempts have been...
The fall downstream migrations of juvenile American shad Alosa sapidissima and blueback herring Alos...
Published version of an article from the journal: Marine Ecology Progress Series. Also available fro...
Passage of hydropower plants by upstream-migrating salmonid spawners is associated with reduced migr...
Fish are adapted to spawn where their larvae will be retained in, or transported to suitable juvenil...
The development of hydroelectric power production and the damming of water courses that ensues cause...
Land use planners have the challenge of incorporating biologically sound guidelines into development...
River herring, the collective name given to North American populations of Alewife (Alosa pseudoharen...
Tide gates, used to regulate tidal flow as part of land reclamation programmes, temporally block fis...
The behaviour of returning Salmo salar (Linnaeus, 1758) approaching, and attempting to pass low-head...
Graduation date: 2011Tidal marshlands in the upper estuary ecotone provide essential habitat for\ud ...
Hydropower dams block migration routes and disrupt longitudinal connectivity in rivers, thereby posi...
Three-hundred adult trout were caught between 0.5 and 6.0 km upstream from tide gates in the River S...
Tide gates are one-way doors integrated into dyke systems that prevent saltwater intrusion to agricu...
The range of river herring (A. pseudoharengus and A. aestivalis) is much smaller now than historical...
In an effort to restore populations of migratory salmonids on the Columbia River, attempts have been...
The fall downstream migrations of juvenile American shad Alosa sapidissima and blueback herring Alos...
Published version of an article from the journal: Marine Ecology Progress Series. Also available fro...
Passage of hydropower plants by upstream-migrating salmonid spawners is associated with reduced migr...
Fish are adapted to spawn where their larvae will be retained in, or transported to suitable juvenil...
The development of hydroelectric power production and the damming of water courses that ensues cause...