Peter B. Moyle
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Non-native fish in the fresh waters of Portugal, Azores and Madeira Islands: a growing threat to aquatic biodiversity.
Fisheries Management and Ecology. 16(4), 255–264.
(2009). Quantifying activated floodplains on a lowland regulated river: its application to floodplain restoration in the Sacramento Valley.
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science. 7(1),
(2009).
(2009).
Aquatic ecosystems.
(Healey, M., Dettinger M., & Norgaard R., Ed.).The State of Bay-Delta Science 2008. 55-72.
(2008). Changes in fish diets and mercury accumulation in Clear Lake, California: effects of an invasive planktivorous fish.
Ecological Applications. 18(8 Supplement), A213-A226.
(2008). The Economic Costs and Adaptations for Alternative Delta Regulations Technical Appendix F.
Comparing Futures for the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta..
(2008). Economic Effects on Agriculture of Water Export Salinity South of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
(Lund, J. R., Hanak E., Fleenor W. E., Bennett W. A., Howitt R., Mount JF., et al., Ed.).Comparing Futures for the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
(2008). Ephemeral floodplain habitats provide best growth conditions for juvenile Chinook salmon in a California river.
Environmental Biology of Fishes. 83(4),
(2008). An expert survey on the viability of delta fish populations.
Technical Appendix E to Comparing Futures for the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta. 29.
(2008). The Future of Fish in Response to Large-Scale Change in the San Francisco Estuary, California.
American Fisheries Society Symposium. 64,
(2008). The future of the delta ecosystem and its fish.
Technical Appendix D to Lund, J., et al., Comparing futures for the Sacramento-San Joaquin delta. 38.
(2008). Life-history traits of non-native fishes in Iberian watersheds across several invasion stages: a first approach.
Biological Invasions. 10(1), 89-102.
(2008). Projecting Cumulative Benefits of Multiple River Restoration Projects: An Example from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River System in California.
Environmental Management. 42(6), 933-945.
(2008). Protecting migration routes.
Issues in Science and Technology. 24 (summer)(4),
(2008). Review of: Analysis and interpretation of freshwater fisheries data.
(Guy, CS., & Brown ML., Ed.).Quarterly Review of Biology. 83, 203-204.
(2008). Role of hardwood in forming habitat for southern California steelhead.
Proceedings of the sixth California oak symposium: today's challenges, tomorrow's opportunities. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report PSW-GTR-217. 307-319.
(2008).
(2008).
(2008).
Serpentine haiku.
California Coast and Ocean. 24(2), 40.
(2008).
(2008).
(2007).
(2007).
(2007).
Homogenous rivers, homogenous faunas.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104(14), 5711-5712.
(2007). Patterns In The Use Of A Restored California Floodplain By Native And Alien Fishes.
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science. 5(3),
(2007). Biological Invasions: Recommendations for U.S. Policy and Management.
Ecological Applications. 16(6), 2035-2054.
(2006). Making a precarious perch more secure: Central Valley farm ponds for native fish conservation.
Sustainable Agriculture . 18(3),
(2006). Managing Fire-Prone Forests in the Western United States.
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 4(9), pp. 481-487.
(2006). Predicting Invasion Success: Freshwater Fishes in California as a Model.
BioScience. 56(6), 515-524.
(2006). Review of Freshwater Fishes of Mexico by Robert Rush Miller.
(Miller, R. Rush, Ed.).Quarterly Review of Biology . 81,
(2006). Salmon, Wildlife, and Wine: Marine-Derived Nutrients in Human-Dominated Ecosystems of Central California.
Ecological Applications. 16(3), 999-1009.
(2006). Alien fishes in California’s marine environments.
(Allen, L. G., & Horn M. H., Ed.).Ecology of California marine fishes. . 611–620.
(2005). A conceptual model for floodplain restoration.
Flood Management Association News . 15(4), 7-10.
(2005). Native Fishes of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Drainage, California: A History of Decline.
(Rinne, J. N., Hughes R. M., & Calamusso B., Ed.).Historical Changes in Large River Fish Assemblages of the Americas. 45, 75-98.
(2005). Untested assumptions: Effectiveness of Screening Diversions for Conservation of Fish Populations.
Fisheries. 30(5), 20-28.
(2005). Variability in Length-Weight Relationships Used to Estimate Biomass of Estuarine Fish from Survey Data.
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 134(2), 481-495.
(2005). Alien Fishes in California Watersheds: Characteristics of Successful and Failed Invaders.
Ecological Applications. 14(2), 587-596.
(2004). Biology and Population Dynamics of Sacramento Splittail (Pogonichthys macrolepidotus) in the San Francisco Estuary: A Review.
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science. 2(2), 1-47.
(2004).
(2004).
Fish Invasions in California Watersheds: Testing Hypotheses Using Landscape Patterns.
Ecological Applications. 14(5), 1507-1525.
(2004). The Imperiled Giants of the Mekong: Ecologists struggle to understand—and protect—Southeat Asia's large migratory catfish.
American Scientist. 92(3), 228-237.
(2004). Invasive species profiling? Exploring the characteristics of non-native fishes across invasion stages in California.
Freshwater Biology. 49(5), 646–661.
(2004). Review of Snakehead: fish out of water by Jay Dolan.
CoCopeia . 710-711.
(2004).