Laserfiche WebLink
374 <br />The Southwestern Naturalist <br />stocked at 30 mm TL exhibited survivorship <br />greater than 90% in one backwater. <br />The program is a cooperative effort of the multi- <br />agency Native-Fish Work-Group representing Ari- <br />zona Game and Fish Department, Arizona State Uni- <br />versity, National Park Service, Nevada Division of <br />Wildlife, National Biological Survey, United States <br />Bureau of Reclamation, and United States Fish and <br />Wildlife Service. We acknowledge the support and as- <br />sistance of personnel from all these agencies and the <br />issuance of Federal subpermit PRT-676811 by the <br />United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Special thanks <br />to W. L. Hinckley for constructive comments on sev- <br />eral drafts of the manuscript. <br />LITERATURE CITED <br />BENKE, A. C., AND S. S. BENKE. 1975. Comparative <br />dynamics and life histories of coexisting dragonfly <br />populations. Ecology, 56:302-317. <br />BENNETT, G. W. 1970. Management of lakes and <br />ponds. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York. <br />CLAUSEN, C. P. ]972. Entomophagous insects. Haf- <br />ner Publishing, New York. <br />CORSET, P. S. 1963. A biology of dragonflies. Quad- <br />rangle, Chicago, Illinois. <br />CROWDER, L. B. 1980. Alewife, rainbow smelt and <br />native fishes in Lake Michigan: competition or pre- <br />dation? Environ. Biol. Fish., 5:225-233. <br />HUNTER, J. R. 1981. Feeding ecology and predation <br />of marine fish larvae. Pp. 33-79, in Marine fish <br />larvae: morphology, ecology and relation to fisheries <br />(R. Lasker, ed.). Univ. Washington Press, Seattle. <br />MARSH, P. C., AND D. R. LANGHORST. 1988. Feed- <br />ing and fate of wild larval razorback suckers. En- <br />viron. Biol. Fish. 21:59-67. <br />MCCARTHY, M. S., AND W. L. HINCKLEY. 1987. <br />vol. 39, no. 4 <br />Age estimation for razorback sucker (Pisces: Catos- <br />tomidae) from Lake Mohave, Arizona-Nevada. J. <br />Arizona-Nevada Acad. Sci., 21:87-97. <br />HINCKLEY, W. L. 1983. Status of the razorback suck- <br />er, Xyrauchen texanus, in the lower Colorado River <br />basin. Southwestern Nat., 28:165-187. <br />HINCKLEY, W. L., AND E. S. GUSTAFSON. 1982. Ear- <br />ly development of the razorback sucker, Xyrauchen <br />texanus (Abbott). Great Basin Nat., 42:553-561. <br />HINCKLEY, W. L., P. C. MARSH, J. E. BROOKS, J. E. <br />JOHNSON, AND B. L. JENSEN. 1991. Management <br />toward recovery of the razorback sucker. Pp. 503- <br />557, in Battle against extinction: native fish man- <br />agement in the American West (W. L. Hinckley <br />and J. E. Deacon, eds.). Univ. Arizona Press, Tuc- <br />son. <br />NETER, J. W., W. WA$SERMAN, AND M. H. KUTNER. <br />1985. Applied linear statistical models. Irwin Pub- <br />lishing, Homewood, Illinois. <br />PRITCHARD, G. 1964. The prey of dragonfly larva <br />(Odonata; Anisoptera) in ponds in northern Al- <br />berta. Canadian J. Zool., 42:785-800. <br />SNEDECOR, G. W., AND W. G. COCHRAN. 1967. Sta- <br />tistical methods. Iowa State Univ. Press, Ames. <br />TAVE, D., M. REZK, AND R. O. SMITHERMAN. 1990. <br />Effect of body color of Oreochromis mossambicus (Pe- <br />ters) on predation by dragonfly nymphs. Aquacult. <br />and Fish. Mgmt., 21:157-162. <br />WILSON, C. B. 1918. Dragonflies and damselflies in <br />relation to pond fish culture, with a list of those <br />found near Fairport, Iowa. U.S. Fish. Bull., 36: <br />18 ] -264. <br />WISSINGER, S. A. 1988. Life-history and size struc- <br />ture of larval dragonfly populations. J. North Amer. <br />Benthol. Soc., 7:13-28. <br />WRIGHT, M. 1946. The economic importance of <br />dragonflies (Odonata). J. Tennessee Acad. Sci., 21: <br />60-71. <br />i~ <br />