
Publications from the BREACH Research Program
Preliminary results published
in our Interim Report (Adobe Acrobat
required):
Masters Thesis on Non-Indigenous
Species:
Journal Articles:
- Toft, J.D., C.A. Simenstad, J.R. Cordell, and L.F. Grimaldo. 2003. The effects of introduced water hyacinth on habitat structure, invertebrate assemblages, and fish diets. Estuaries 26: 746-758.
- Toft, J.D., J.R. Cordell, and W.C. Fields. 2002. New Records of Crustaceans (Amphipoda, Isopoda) in the Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta, California, and Application of Criteria for Introduced Species. Journal of Crustacean Biology 22(1):190-200.
- Magniez, G., and J. Toft. 2000. Présence d’un Asellide épigé originaire d’Extrême-Orient en Californie. Bulletin mensuel de la Société Linnéenne de Lyon 69:127-132.
Download the following IEP Newsletters:
- Examining the relative predation risks of
juvenile chinook salmon in shallow water habitat: the effect
of submerged aquatic vegetation. L. Grimaldo, C. Peregrin, and
R. Miller. 2000 IEP Newsletter 13(1):57-61.
- More Non-Indigenous Species? First Records
of one Amphipod and Two Isopods in the Delta. J. Toft, J. Cordell,
and C. Simenstad. 1999 IEP Newsletter 12(4):35-38.
- Preliminary results from the Sacramento-San
Joaquin Delta breached levee wetland study (BREACH). C. Simenstad,
J. Toft, H. Higgins, J. Cordell, M. Orr, P. Williams, L. Grimaldo,
Z. Hymanson, and D. Reed. 1999 IEP Newsletter 12(4):15-21.
- What is the impact of the introduced Brazilian
waterweed Egeria Densa to the Delta ecosystem? L. Grimaldo and
Z. Hymanson. 1999 IEP Newsletter 12(1):43-5.
- Determining the importance of shallow water
habitat in the Delta to resident and migratory fishes: a new
challenge for IEP. L. Grimaldo, B. Harrel, R. Miller and Z. Hymanson.
1998 IEP Newsletter 11(3):32-4.
Back to the BREACH Home Page