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C Muhlfeld

The potential influence of changing climate on the persistence of native salmonids “at risk�: Linking fine scale analysis to decision support, credited to Muhlfeld, C., published in 2010. Published in USFS Region 1 Annual Water Resources Meeting, Missoula, Montana, 3 March 2010, in 2010.
Instream flow and climate modeling research in the upper Columbia River Basin, credited to Muhlfeld, C., published in 2010. Published in Flathead Hydrologic Modeling Workshop, Flathead Community College, Kalispell, Montana, January 26, 2010, in 2010.
Climate change in the Crown of the Continent Ecosystem: Implications for fisheries, credited to Muhlfeld, C., published in 2010. Published in International Crown Managers Partnership Forum, Fernie, British Columbia, Canada. 14 April 2010, in 2010.
Potential impacts of climate change on aquatic ecosystems fin the Crown of the Continent: Implications for conservation and management of native species and habitats, credited to Muhlfeld, C., published in 2010.
Warming during the 20th century drove a series of environmental trends that have profound implications for many aspects of salmonid habitat including disturbance regimes, such as wildfire, and unfavorable changes to thermal and hydrologic properties of aquatic systems. As dramatic and extensive as climatic and environmental trends are for salmonid habitats, global climate models (GCMs) project that many of these trends will continue and even accelerate until at least the middle of the 21st century. Clearly, managers of native salmonids in the western United States should consider adjusting management strategies to accommodate a warmer and possibly drier future. Tools are needed to forecast where important changes...
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