Likening it to providing more runways at busy airports, researchers at North Carolina State University found in a new study that adding protruding rocks to restored streams can help attract female ...
In a majestic and rarely observed sight, millions of migrating insects hum through a 30-meter-wide pass in the Pyrenees every autumn. The massive flying convoy fascinated the University of Exeter ...
The abundance and other characteristics of rocks partially extending above the water surface could be important for improving the recovery of aquatic insect populations in restored streams. Nearly ...
An endangered aquatic insect that lives in icy streams fed by glaciers might not mind if the water grows warmer due to climate. A new study found that mountain stoneflies can tolerate warmer water ...
Carla L. Atkinson, Andrea C. Encalada, Amanda T. Rugenski, Steve A. Thomas, Andrea Landeira-Dabarca, N. LeRoy Poff and Alexander S. Flecker Food resource availability varies along gradients of ...
The presence of insecticides in streams is increasingly a global concern, yet information on safe concentrations for aquatic ecosystems is sometimes sparse. In a new study led by Colorado State ...
(from left) Scott Hotaling, Alisha Shah and Lusha Tronstad take time out from conducting fieldwork in the Tetons last summer. The three contributed to a paper, titled “Mountain Stoneflies May Tolerate ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results