Publications
The role of tidal marsh restoration in fish management in the San Francisco Estuary.
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science. 12(1),
(2014). Resource partitioning in a non-coevolved assemblage of estuarine fishes.
(Caillet, G. M., & Simenstad C. A., Ed.).Proceedings of the Third Pacific Workshop on Fish Food Habit Studies. 178-184.
(1982).
(1996). Patterns in distribution and abundance of a noncoevolved assemblage of estuarine fishes in California.
Fishery Bulletin. 84, 105-117.
(1986).
(2013). Life-history patterns and community structure in stream fishes of western North America: Comparisons with eastern North America and Europe.
(Matthew, W. J., & Heins D. C., Ed.).Community and Evolutionary Ecology of North American Stream Fishes. 25-32.
(1987). Life History and Status of Delta Smelt in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Estuary, California.
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 121(1), 67-77.
(1992). Introduced Species and Vacant Niches.
The American Naturalist. 128(5), 751-760.
(1986). Factors Affecting Fish Entrainment into Massive Water Diversions in a Tidal Freshwater Estuary: Can Fish Losses be Managed?.
North American Journal of Fisheries Management. 29(5), 1253-1270.
(2009). The Ecology of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta: a Community Profile..
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report . 85(7.22), 106.
(1989). The Draft Bay-Delta Conservation Plan: Assessment of Environmental Performance and Governance.
West-Northwest Journal of Environmental Law & Policy.
(2014). Dietary shifts in a stressed fish assemblage: Consequences of a bivalve invasion in the San Francisco Estuary.
Environmental Biology of Fishes. 67(3), 277-288.
(2003). Changes in Abundance and Distribution of Native and Introduced Fishes of Suisun Marsh.
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 123(4), 498-507.
(1994).