Temporal and Spatial Relations between the Spawning of Humpback Chub and Roundtail Chub in the Upper Colorado River

Author(s):  
Lynn R. Kaeding ◽  
Bob D. Burdick ◽  
Patricia A. Schrader ◽  
Charles W. McAda

ABSTRACT Population abundance estimates conducted from 1998 to 2000 were completed for adult (>200 mm) humpback chub <em>Gila cypha</em> and roundtail chub <em>G. robusta</em> in Westwater Canyon on the Colorado River, Utah. Sampling was conducted annually using a three-pass mark–recapture approach. The primary method of capture was trammel netting with supplemental electrofishing on one pass per year. Separate abundance estimates were generated for each year of the study using the null estimator (M<sub>o</sub>) within Program CAPTURE. Results showed a decline in the adult humpback chub population between 1998 and 1999 and no change in abundance between 1999 and 2000. The adult roundtail chub population abundance in Westwater Canyon during this time period was relatively stable. Catch per unit effort (CPUE) data from this study and historic interagency standardized monitoring indicated a continued declining trend in mean CPUE for humpback chub that was significant. Mean CPUE for roundtail chub also showed a continued declining trend, but it was not statistically significant. The results of this study provide information to assess the current status of these two species and a point of reference for future population estimates of chub in the upper Colorado River basin.


Author(s):  
Didier Debaise

Which kind of relation exists between a stone, a cloud, a dog, and a human? Is nature made of distinct domains and layers or does it form a vast unity from which all beings emerge? Refusing at once a reductionist, physicalist approach as well as a vitalistic one, Whitehead affirms that « everything is a society » This chapter consequently questions the status of different domains which together compose nature by employing the concept of society. The first part traces the history of this notion notably with reference to the two thinkers fundamental to Whitehead: Leibniz and Locke; the second part defines the temporal and spatial relations of societies; and the third explores the differences between physical, biological, and psychical forms of existence as well as their respective ways of relating to environments. The chapter thus tackles the status of nature and its domains.


2006 ◽  
Vol 135 (2) ◽  
pp. 539-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig P. Paukert ◽  
Lewis G. Coggins ◽  
Christopher E. Flaccus

2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 333-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Forest P. Hayes ◽  
Michael J. Dodrill ◽  
Brandon S. Gerig ◽  
Colton Finch ◽  
William E. Pine III

Abstract Determining the population status of endangered Humpback Chub Gila cypha is a major component of the adaptive management program designed to inform operation of Glen Canyon Dam upstream from Grand Canyon, Arizona. In recent decades, resource managers have identified a portfolio of management actions (with intermittent implementation) to promote population recovery of Humpback Chub, including nonnative fish removal, changes in water release volumes and discharge ramping schedules, and reductions in hydropower peaking operations. The Humpback Chub population in Grand Canyon has increased over this same period, causal factors for which are unclear. We took advantage of unusual hydrology in the Colorado River basin in 2011 to assess trends in juvenile Humpback Chub length–weight relationships and condition in the Colorado River below Glen Canyon Dam as well as in the unregulated Little Colorado River. Within each river, we observed higher length–weight b-parameter estimates (exponent of the standard power equation) at higher water temperatures. We also found higher slope estimates for the length–weight relationship at higher temperatures in the Little Colorado River. Slope estimates were more variable in the Colorado River, where mean water temperatures were more uniform. The next step is to examine whether Humpback Chub length–weight relationships influence population metrics such as abundance or survival. If these relationships exist, then monitoring condition in juvenile Humpback Chub would provide a quick and low-cost technique for assessing population response to planned management experiments or changing environmental conditions.


Development ◽  
1954 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 175-193
Author(s):  
P. D. Nieuwkoop ◽  
G. v. Nigtevecht

Experiments in which folds of competent ectoderm were attached to neural plates of host embryos at various cranio-caudal levels (Nieuwkoop et al., 1952) suggested that two successive influences emanate from the underlying archenteron roof: a first one representing a more or less non-specific activation which leads autonomously to a differentiation in a prosencephalic direction; and a second one transforming these prosencephalic differentiation tendencies into more caudal ones leading to the formation of rhombencephalon and spinal cord. The work of Eyal-Giladi (1954) in which the temporal and spatial relations of neural induction were analysed by means of an interruption of the induction at various stages of development and at various cranio-caudal levels of the presumptive neural area showed very clearly that during gastrulation two successive waves of induction actually pass through the presumptive neuro-ectoderm in a caudo-cranial direction. The first wave, which emanates from the presumptive prechordal material, leads to an activation of the ectoderm and its autonomous development in a prosencephalic direction.


2015 ◽  
Vol 144 (3) ◽  
pp. 502-514 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan J. Spurgeon ◽  
Craig P. Paukert ◽  
Brian D. Healy ◽  
Melissa Trammell ◽  
Dave Speas ◽  
...  

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