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Reviews in Fisheries Science

Volume 17, Issue 1, 2009

Abstract

With the increasing appreciation of global warming impacts on ecological systems, in addition to the myriad of land management effects on water quality, the number of literature citations dealing with the effects of water temperature on freshwater fish has escalated in the past decade. Given the many biological scales at which water temperature effects have been studied, and the growing need to integrate knowledge from multiple disciplines of thermal biology to fully protect beneficial uses, we held that a survey of the most promising recent developments and an expression of some of the remaining unanswered questions with significant management implications would best be approached collectively by a diverse research community. We have identified five specific topic areas of renewed research where new techniques and critical thought could benefit coldwater stream fishes (particularly salmonids): molecular, organism, population/species, community and ecosystem, and policy issues in water quality. Our hope is that information gained through examination of recent research fronts linking knowledge at various scales will prove useful in managing water quality at a basin level to protect fish populations and whole ecosystems. Standards of the past were based largely on incipient lethal and optimum growth rate temperatures for fish species, while future standards should consider all integrated thermal impacts to the organism and ecosystem.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 04 Feb 2009

Author affiliations

  • a Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Portland, Oregon, USA
  • b U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA
  • c Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA
  • d College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA
  • e Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Technical and Ecological Services, San Ramon, California, USA
  • f Watercourse Engineering, Inc., Davis, California, USA
  • g Western Ecology Division, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Corvallis, Oregon, USA
  • h U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, CA-NV Fish Health Center, Anderson, California, USA
  • i U.S. Forest Service, PNW Research Station, Corvallis, Oregon, USA
  • j North State Resources, Inc., Redding, California, USA
  • k U.S. Geological Survey, Western Fisheries Research Center, Columbia River Research Laboratory, Cook, Washington, USA
  • l Cemagref, Unité de recherche Biologie des Ecosystèmes Aquatiques, Laboratoire d'hydroécologie quantitative, Lyon, France
  • m Watershed Sciences Department/Ecology Center, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA

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