|
<br />ENDANGERED SPECIES
<br />
<br />379
<br />
<br />Southwest. Canadian Special Publication of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 106:220-
<br />239.
<br />Contreras Balderas, S. 1987. Threatened and endangered fishes of Mexico. Proceedings of
<br />the Desert Fishes Council 16-18:58-65.
<br />Contreras Balderas, S. 1991. Conservation of Mexican freshwater fishes: some protected
<br />sites and species, and recent federal legislation. Pages 191-197 in Minckley and
<br />Deacon (1991).
<br />Cook, F. R., and D. Muir. 1984. The Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in
<br />Canada (COSEWIC): history and progress. Canadian Field-Naturalist 98:63-70.
<br />Courtenay, W. R., and C. C. Kohler. 1986. Exotic fishes in North American fisheries
<br />management. Pages 401-413 in Stroud (1986).
<br />Deacon, J. E., G. Kobetich, J. D. Williams, and S. Contreras. 1979. Fishes of North
<br />America endangered, threatened, or of special concern: 1979. Fisheries (Bethesda)
<br />4(2):29-44.
<br />Deacon, J. E., and C. D. Williams. 1991. Ash Meadows and the legacy of the Devils Hole
<br />pupfish. Pages 69-87 in Minckley and Deacon (1991).
<br />Echelle, A. F., A. A. EcheIle, and D. R. Edds. 1989. Conservation genetics of a spring-
<br />dwelling desert fish, the Pecos gambusia (Gambusia nobilis, Poeciliidae). Conserva-
<br />tion Biology 3:159-169.
<br />Ehrenfeld, D. W. 1976. The conservation of non-resources. American Scientist 64:648-
<br />656.
<br />Ehrlich, P. R. 1987. Population biology, conservation biology, and the future of humanity.
<br />BioScience 37:757-763.
<br />Ehrlich, P., and A. Ehrlich. 1981. Extinction: the causes and consequences of the
<br />disappearance of species. Random House, New York.
<br />Frankel, O. H. 1974. Genetic conservation: our evolutionary responsibility. Genetics
<br />78:53-65.
<br />Goodman, D. 1975. The theory of diversity-stability relationships in ecology. Quarterly
<br />Review of Biology 50:237-266.
<br />Gresswell, R. E., editor. 1988. Status and management of interior stocks of cutthroat
<br />trout. American Fisheries Society Symposium 4.
<br />Hickman, G. D. 1981. Is the snail darter transplant a success? Pages 338-344 in L. A.
<br />Krumholz. editor. The warm water streams symposium: a national symposium on
<br />fisheries aspects of warmwater streams. American Fisheries Society, Southern Divi-
<br />sion, Bethesda, Maryland.
<br />Humphrey, S. R. 1985. How species became vulnerable to extinction and how we can
<br />meet the crises. Pages 9-29 in R. J. Hoage, editor. Animal extinctions: what everyone
<br />should know. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.
<br />Johnson, J. E. 1987. Protected fishes of the United States and Canada. American
<br />Fisheries Society, Bethesda, Maryland.
<br />Johnson, J. E., and B. L. Jensen. 1991. Hatcheries for endangered freshwater fishes.
<br />Pages 199-217 in Minckley and Deacon (1991).
<br />Johnson, J. E., and J. N. Rinne. 1982. The Endangered Species Act and Southwest fishes.
<br />Fisheries (Bethesda) 7(4):2-8.
<br />Kikkawa, J. 1986. Complexity, diversity and stability. Pages 41-62 in J. Kikkawa and
<br />D. J. Anderson, editors. Community ecology: patterns and process. Blackwell
<br />Scientific Publications, Melbourne, Australia.
<br />Kohm, K. A., editor. 1991. Balancing on the brink of extinction-the Endangered Species
<br />Act and lessons for the future. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
<br />Kucera, P. A., D. L. Koch, and G. F. Marco. 1985. Introductions of Lahontan cutthroat
<br />trout into Omak Lake, Washington. North American Journal of Fisheries Management
<br />5:296-301.
<br />McAllister, D. E., B. J. Parker, and P. M. McKee. 1985. Rare, endangered and extinct
<br />fishes in Canada. National Museums of Canada, National Museum of Natural Sciences
<br />Syllogeus 54, Ottawa.
<br />
<br />-
<br />
|