2 resultados para low flow
em Digital Commons @ DU | University of Denver Research
Resumo:
The following document identifies the impact to the current management plan of the Rio Salado Riparian Habitat Restoration Area in the event the endangered Southwestern Willow Flycatcher is found nesting at the project site. Rio Salado is managed by the City of Phoenix Parks and Recreation Department, and consists of a low-flow channel with native vegetation and wildlife along the Salt River. This paper analyzes the regulatory responsibilities of project site management and discusses the necessary adjustments to the management plan. Despite the current absence of the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher from Rio Salado, management should enter into a Safe Harbor Agreement with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to legally protect themselves from the regulations stipulated in the Endangered Species Act.
Resumo:
I investigated effects of annual spring flows on the abundance of Rio Grande silvery minnow, red shiner, and fathead minnow within two segments of the Middle Rio Grande (i.e., above and below the Rio Puerco) using 12 years of data. Rio Grande silvery minnow abundance was positively related to high spring flows and negatively related to low spring flows. Conversely, the abundance of the red shiner and fathead minnow were negatively related to high spring flows and positively related to low spring flows. The strength of these relationships varied with species and location but results from analyses below the Rio Puerco showed a stronger positive and negative relationship (with high and low spring flows, respectively) for Rio Grande silvery minnow.