Ausgabe 6/2011
Special Issue:Long-Term Biological Monitoring of an Impaired Stream: Implications for Environmental Management
Inhalt (10 Artikel)
Twenty-Five Years of Ecological Recovery of East Fork Poplar Creek: Review of Environmental Problems and Remedial Actions
James M. Loar, Arthur J. Stewart, John G. Smith
Long-Term Water-Quality Changes in East Fork Poplar Creek, Tennessee: Background, Trends, and Potential Biological Consequences
Arthur J. Stewart, John G. Smith, James M. Loar
Role of a Comprehensive Toxicity Assessment and Monitoring Program in the Management and Ecological Recovery of a Wastewater Receiving Stream
Mark S. Greeley Jr., Lynn A. Kszos, Gail W. Morris, John G. Smith, Arthur J. Stewart
Application of Biochemical and Physiological Indicators for Assessing Recovery of Fish Populations in a Disturbed Stream
S. Marshall Adams, Kenneth D. Ham
Monitoring Fish Contaminant Responses to Abatement Actions: Factors that Affect Recovery
George R. Southworth, Mark J. Peterson, W. Kelly Roy, Teresa J. Mathews
Long-Term Benthic Macroinvertebrate Community Monitoring to Assess Pollution Abatement Effectiveness
John G. Smith, Craig C. Brandt, Sigurd W. Christensen
Importance of Data Management in a Long-Term Biological Monitoring Program
Sigurd W. Christensen, Craig C. Brandt, Mary K. McCracken
Long-Term Biological Monitoring of an Impaired Stream: Synthesis and Environmental Management Implications
Mark J. Peterson, Rebecca A. Efroymson, S. Marshall Adams