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Summary <br />following gaps in key information related to threatened and endangered species on the central <br />and lower Platte River, and it recommends that they be addressed to provide improved scientific <br />support for decision - making. <br />A multiple- species perspective is missing from research and management of threatened <br />and endangered species on the central and lower Platte River. The interactions of the <br />protected species with each other and with unprotected species are poorly known. Efforts <br />to enhance one species may be detrimental to another species, but these connections <br />remain largely unknown because research has been focused on single species. One <br />approach is to shift from the focus on single species to an ecosystem perspective that <br />emphasizes the integration of biotic and abiotic processes supporting a natural <br />assemblage of species and habitats. <br />There is no systemwide, integrated operation plan or data - collection plan for the <br />combined hydrological system in the North Platte, South Platte, and central Platte Rivers <br />that can inform researchers and managers on issues that underlie threatened and <br />endangered species conservation. Natural and engineered variations in flows in one part <br />of the basin have unknown effects on other parts of the basin, especially with respect to <br />reservoir storage, groundwater storage, and river flows. <br />A lack of full understanding of the geographic extent of the populations of imperiled <br />species that inhabit the central Platte River and a lack of reliable information on their <br />population sizes and dynamics limit our ability to use demographic models to predict <br />• accurately their fates under different land - management and water -use scenarios. <br />Detailed population viability analyses using the most recent data would improve <br />understanding of the dynamics of the populations of at -risk species and would allow <br />managers to explore a variety of options to learn about the probable outcomes of <br />decisions. Continuation of population monitoring of at -risk species using the best <br />available techniques, including color- banding of prefledged chicks and application of <br />new telemetry techniques, is recommended. <br />• <br />There is no larger regional context for the central and lower Platte River in research and <br />management. Most of the research and decision - making regarding threatened and <br />endangered species in the Platte River Basin have restricted analysis to the basin itself, as <br />though species used its habitats in isolation from other habitats outside the basin. There <br />are substantial gaps in integrative scientific understanding of the connections between <br />species that use the habitats of the central and lower Platte River and adjacent habitat <br />areas, such as the Rainwater Basin of southern Nebraska and the Loup, Elkhorn, and <br />Niobrara Rivers and other smaller northern Great Plains rivers. <br />The committee is confident that the central Platte River and lower Platte River are <br />essential for the survival and recovery of the listed bird species and pallid sturgeon. <br />However, in light of the habitat it provides and the perilously low numbers of the species, <br />there is not enough information to assess the exact degree to which the Platte contributes <br />to their survival and recovery. <br />11 <br />