Search

You searched for: Start Over Wildlife refuges Remove constraint Wildlife refuges Database Klamath Waters Library Remove constraint Database: Klamath Waters Library

Search Results

  • 2012
    TRINITY RIVER FLOW EVALUATION - FINAL REPORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY When Congress authorized construction of the Trinity River Division (TRD) of the Central Valley Project (CVP) in 1955, the expectation was ...
    Citation
  • 352. [Image] Settler's guide
    511
    This brochure was probably published by the United States Bureau of Reclamation. It was compiled to provide information on the requirements and recommendations regarding homesteading on Tule Lake.
    Citation
  • 22
    "April 1998"--P. [4] of cover; Includes bibliographical references (p. 57-66)
    Citation
  • 608
    "December 22, 1998."
    Citation
  • 3481
    FINAL PROGRESS REPORT FOR FISHERIES INVESTIGATIONS ON BLUE CREEK, TRIBUTARY TO K1AMATH RIVER, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA FY 1993 (October 1992 - September 1993) ABSTRACT The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, ...
    Citation
  • 769
    PROGRESS REPORT FOR INVESTIGATIONS ON BLUE CREEK FT 1992 ABSTRACT The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Coastal California Fishery Resource Office in Arcata, California, was funded to investigate chinook ...
    Citation
  • 759
    We analyzed the reproductive biology and demographics of the Lost River sucker Deltistes luxatus and shortnose sucker Chasmistes brevirostris, two endangered species endemic to the upper Klamath Basin ...
    Citation
  • 3476
    Executive Summary The Independent Multidisciplinary Science Team (IMST) convened a panel of experts on stream temperature and fish ecology on October 5-6, 2000 for a scientific workshop on human influences ...
    Citation
  • 490
    "May 2000"; From cover: Prepared for U.S. Department of Agriculture/Natural Resources Conservation Service, 2316 South 6th Street, Suite C, Klamath Falls, Oregon 97601. In Partnership with The Nature Conservancy, ...
    Citation
  • 3483
    Executive Summary The jawless lampreys are remnants of the oldest vertebrates in the world. Oregon has somewhere between eight and a dozen species of these primitive fishes. Their taxonomy is obscure ...
    Citation