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Exclusion experiments with backwater invertebrate communities of the Green River, Utah

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Collins, Kenneth P, and Shiozawa, Dennis K, Exclusion experiments with backwater invertebrate communities of the Green River, Utah: .

Summary

The role of biotic interactions in structuring freshwater invertebrate communities has been extensively studied but with mixed results. For example, fish effects on invertebrates are most pronounced in pelagic and soft-sediment benthic habitats that lack structural complexity, yet appear insignificant in benthic rubble habitats. Backwaters of the Green River, Utah, are shallow, structurally simple, quiet-water embayments adjacent to the river. These habitats form in middle to late summer and are colonized by benthic and epibenthic invertebrates that produce standing crops significantly higher than the river. Backwaters are also utilized by a large number of fish species. We used cages to determine if selective exclusion of backwater [...]

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  • Upper Colorado River Basin

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From Source - Mendeley RIS Export <br> On - Wed Sep 19 08:03:42 MDT 2012

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Title Citation Exclusion experiments with backwater invertebrate communities of the Green River, Utah

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