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Poff, N. L., Angermeier, P. L., Cooper, S. D., Lake, P.S., Fausch, K. D., Winemiller, K. O., <br />Mertes, L. A. K., Oswood, M. W., Reynolds, J., and Rahel, F. J. 2001. Fish diversity in streams <br />and rivers. Pages 315 -349 in F. S. Chapin, O. E. Sala, and E. Huber Sannwald, editors. Global <br />Biodiversity in A Changing Environment: Scenarios for the21 St Century. Springer - Verlag, New <br />York. <br />Rahel, F. J. 2000. Homogenization of fish faunas across the United States. Science 288, 854 -856. <br />Taniguchi, Y., Rahel, F. J., Novinger, D. C., and Gerow, K. G. 1998. Temperature mediation of <br />competitive interactions among three fish species that replace each other along longitudinal stream <br />gradients. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 55: 1894 -1901. <br />Bozek, M. A. and Rahel, F, J. 1992. Generality of microhabitat suitability models for young <br />Colorado River cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki pleuriticus) across sites and among years in <br />Wyoming streams. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 49:552 -564. <br />Bozek, M. A. and Rahel, F. J. 1991. Assessing habitat requirements of young Colorado River <br />cutthroat trout by use of macro habitat and microhabitat analyses. Transactions of the American <br />Fisheries Societyl20: 571 -581. <br />Rahel, F. J. and Hubert, W. A. 1991. Fish assemblages and habitat gradients in a Rocky Mountain <br />- Great Plains stream: biotic zonation and additive patterns of community change. Transactions of <br />the American Fisheries Society 120: 319 -332. <br />CHARLES RABENI, Ph.D. <br />Associate Professor, Fisheries & Wildlife Sciences <br />Unit Leader, MO Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit <br />302 Anheuser -Busch Natural Resources Building <br />University of Missouri - Columbia <br />Columbia, MO 65211 -7240 <br />tel 573 882 -3524, fax 573 884 -5070, emailRabeniC @missouri.edu <br />Ph.D., 1977 University of Maine <br />Research Interests <br />Stream ecology and management, questions useful to the conservation or restoration of the <br />biological integrity of aquatic systems- primarily streams - to enhance their recreational and <br />ecological benefits, focusing on invertebrates and fishes as endpoints and integrators of ecological <br />conditions. Relation of fish distribution and abundance to local and landscape features; key <br />environmental factors influencing the biota - such as siltation, dissolved oxygen, and extreme <br />temperatures - and cost effective mitigation strategies. <br />Selected Publications <br />Rabeni, C. F., Doisy, K. E., and Galat, D. L. 2002.Testing the biological basis of a stream habitat <br />classification using benthic invertebrates. Ecological Applications 12, 782 -796. <br />Turner, M. G., T. R. Crow, J. Liu, D. Rabe, C. F. Rabeni, P. A. Soranno, W. W. Taylor and J. A. <br />Weins. 2002. Bridging the gap between landscape ecology and natural resource management. <br />Pages 433 -460 in J. Liu and W. Taylor (eds.) Integrating landscape ecology into natural resource <br />management. Cambridge University Press. <br />