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J E Williams

Temperature, flow regime and biotic interactions determine differential responses of four trout species to projected climate change (In preparation), credited to Dauwalter, M.M., published in 2011.
Warming during the 20th century drove a series of environmental trends that have profound implications for many aspects of salmonid habitat including disturbance regimes, such as wildfire, and unfavorable changes to thermal and hydrologic properties of aquatic systems. As dramatic and extensive as climatic and environmental trends are for salmonid habitats, global climate models (GCMs) project that many of these trends will continue and even accelerate until at least the middle of the 21st century. Clearly, managers of native salmonids in the western United States should consider adjusting management strategies to accommodate a warmer and possibly drier future. Tools are needed to forecast where important changes...
The Potential Influence of Changing Climate on the Persistence of Riverine Fishes: How do managers use science information to build adaptation strategies for the future?, credited to Williams, J.E., published in 2010. Published in Programme FSBI 2010 Queen’s University Belfast - Fish and Climate Change – 26-30 July 2010, on pages 7 - 7, in 2010.
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