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Mountain streams provide important habitats for many species, but their faunas are especially vulnerable to climate change because of ectothermic physiologies and movements that are constrained to linear networks that are easily fragmented. Effectively conserving biodiversity in these systems requires accurate downscaling of climatic trends to local habitat conditions, but downscaling is difficult in complex terrains given diverse microclimates and mediation of stream heat budgets by local conditions. We compiled a stream temperature database (n = 780) for a 2500-km river network in central Idaho to assess possible trends in summer temperatures and thermal habitat for two native salmonid species from 1993 to 2006....
Native and invasive trout distributions in the Upper Columbia Basin under climate change: influence of flow regime, temperature and biotic interaction, credited to Hamlet, A F, published in 2010. Published in Idaho State University, Pocatello, ID. February 4, 2010, in 2010.
Flow regime influences distributions of brook trout, bull trout and cutthroat trout in the Upper Columbia Basin, credited to Hamlet, A F, published in 2010. Published in Idaho Chapter of the American Fisheries Society Annual Meeting, Pocatello, ID. March 5, 2010, in 2010.
Effects of climate change on native and introduced trout in the Columbia River Basin, credited to Nagel, David E., published in 2010. Published in Interior Columbia Basin Interagency Deputy Team Meeting. Spokane, WA. December 7, 2010, in 2010.
Role of climate and invasive species in structuring trout distributions in the Interior Columbia Basin (In revision), credited to Dunham, J.B., published in 2011. Published in Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, in 2011.