Typology of a Great River Using Fish Assemblages: Implications for the Bioassessment of the Danube River
Published 2016 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Typology of a Great River Using Fish Assemblages: Implications for the Bioassessment of the Danube River
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
RIVER RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 37-49
Publisher
Wiley
Online
2016-07-14
DOI
10.1002/rra.3060
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Bioassessment in complex environments: designing an index for consistent meaning in different settings
- (2016) Raphael D. Mazor et al. Freshwater Science
- Bioassessment in complex environments: designing an index for consistent meaning in different settings
- (2016) Raphael D. Mazor et al. Freshwater Science
- Predicting aquatic vertebrate assemblages from environmental variables at three multistate geographic extents of the western USA
- (2015) Robert M. Hughes et al. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
- Offshore distribution of invasive gobies (Pisces: Gobiidae) along the longitudinal profile of the Danube River
- (2015) Z. Szalóky et al. Fundamental and Applied Limnology
- Combining data from multiple agencies to assess benthic macroinvertebrate communities in a large gravel-bed river
- (2015) Matthew J. Wilson et al. Freshwater Science
- Combining data from multiple agencies to assess benthic macroinvertebrate communities in a large gravel-bed river
- (2015) Matthew J. Wilson et al. Freshwater Science
- Evaluating performance of macroinvertebrate-based adjusted and unadjusted multi-metric indices (MMI) using multi-season and multi-year samples
- (2013) Kai Chen et al. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
- Application of an electrified benthic frame trawl for sampling fish in a very large European river (the Danube River) – Is offshore monitoring necessary?
- (2013) Z. Szalóky et al. FISHERIES RESEARCH
- Method-integrated fish assemblage structure at two spatial scales along a free-flowing stretch of the Austrian Danube
- (2013) Franz Loisl et al. HYDROBIOLOGIA
- Effects of sampling techniques on population assessment of invasive round gobyNeogobiusmelanostomus
- (2013) J. Brandner et al. JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY
- Bigger Is Better: Characteristics of Round Gobies Forming an Invasion Front in the Danube River
- (2013) Joerg Brandner et al. PLoS One
- Regional fish community indicators of landscape disturbance to catchments of the conterminous United States
- (2012) Peter C. Esselman et al. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
- Harmonising the bioassessment of large rivers in the absence of near-natural reference conditions - a case study of the Danube River
- (2012) SEBASTIAN BIRK et al. FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
- Quantifying ichthyofaunal zonation and species richness along a 2800-km reach of the Rio Chama and Rio Grande (USA)
- (2011) Daniel J. McGarvey ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH
- Multiscale Environmental Influences on Fish Assemblage Structure in Central Texas Streams
- (2011) Allison A. Pease et al. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY
- Macroinvertebrate-based multimetric predictive models for evaluating the human impact on biotic condition of Bolivian streams
- (2010) Nabor Moya et al. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
- Site length for biological assessment of boatable rivers
- (2010) J. E. Flotemersch et al. RIVER RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS
- The European Water Framework Directive at the age of 10: A critical review of the achievements with recommendations for the future
- (2010) Daniel Hering et al. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
- Estimating the risk of insect species invasion: Kohonen self-organising maps versus k-means clustering
- (2009) Michael J. Watts et al. ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
- A Predictive Index of Biotic Integrity Model for Aquatic-Vertebrate Assemblages of Western U.S. Streams
- (2009) Didier Pont et al. TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY
- Cold-water coral habitats on seamounts: do they have a specialist fauna?
- (2008) Timothy D. O’Hara et al. DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS
- Comparison of Fish Assemblage Diversity in Natural and Artificial Rip-Rap Habitats in the Littoral Zone of a Large River (River Danube, Hungary)
- (2008) Tibor Erős et al. INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF HYDROBIOLOGY
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started