1967
DOI: 10.2307/2423375
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Fishes of the Neosho River System in Oklahoma

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Cited by 19 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Two species, plains minnow and shoal chub, had historic distributions across much of the study area. The plains minnow occurs in the major western tributaries of the Mississippi including the Missouri (Kelsch, ; Patton et al., ; Pegg & Pierce, ; Steffensen, Eder & Pegg, ), Niobrara (Hrabik et al., ), Platte (Hrabik et al., ; Lynch & Roh, ; Scheurer, Bestgen & Fausch, ; Yu & Peters, ), Republican (Hrabik et al., ), Kansas (Eberle, Wenke & Welker, ), Arkansas (Branson, ; Eberle et al., ; Kilgore & Rising, ) and Red River (Hubbs & Ortenburger, ; Pigg, ) basins. The species is also present in the Gulf Coast drainages of the Colorado and Brazos rivers (Al‐Rawi & Cross, ; Ostrand & Wilde, ; Ostrand, Wilde, Strauss & Young, ; Thomas et al., ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two species, plains minnow and shoal chub, had historic distributions across much of the study area. The plains minnow occurs in the major western tributaries of the Mississippi including the Missouri (Kelsch, ; Patton et al., ; Pegg & Pierce, ; Steffensen, Eder & Pegg, ), Niobrara (Hrabik et al., ), Platte (Hrabik et al., ; Lynch & Roh, ; Scheurer, Bestgen & Fausch, ; Yu & Peters, ), Republican (Hrabik et al., ), Kansas (Eberle, Wenke & Welker, ), Arkansas (Branson, ; Eberle et al., ; Kilgore & Rising, ) and Red River (Hubbs & Ortenburger, ; Pigg, ) basins. The species is also present in the Gulf Coast drainages of the Colorado and Brazos rivers (Al‐Rawi & Cross, ; Ostrand & Wilde, ; Ostrand, Wilde, Strauss & Young, ; Thomas et al., ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…at Miami [Oklahoma], Chetopa [Kansas] and 11 more upriver) impound little water and trap little sediment compared with the impoundments. There are also few natural lakes or wetlands in the watershed; most of the runoff is derived from the 102 cm average annual rainfall in the basin (Branson, 1967). Many characteristics of a natural flow regime (Poff et al, 1997) persist in the lower Neosho River used by spawning paddlefish.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The hydrologic regime is characteristic of the highly variable intercontinental climate, with relatively low mean annual flow and highly variable annual peak flow, typically occurring between April and June (Upper Neosho River: mean annual discharge, 8.7m 3 s -1 ; annual peak flows, 124.6–4,927.3 m 3 s -1 (1963–2012; USGS gage 07179730); Lower Cottonwood River: mean annual discharge, 24.4 m 3 s -1 ; annual peak flows, 146.7–26,306.5 m 3 s -1 (1963–2012; USGS gage 07182250)[ 29 ]. The entire Neosho River basin has high aquatic biodiversity including over 100 species of fish [ 30 , 31 ] and approximately 35 species of mussels [ 32 ]. Many of these aquatic species have life histories adapted to perennial flashy streams ( sensu [ 33 ]).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%