Visit the Western Region of the WLFW
Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Navigate WLFW Landscapes
Grasslands and Savannas
Aquatics
Eastern Deciduous Forests
Western Landscapes
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
RETURN TO LANDSCAPE PARTNERSHIP SITE
Navigate Target Species
American Black Duck
Blanding's Turtle
Bog turtle
Colorado River Mussels
Conasauga River Aquatic Species
Eastern Hellbender
Golden-Winged Warbler
Gopher Tortoise
Lesser Prairie-Chicken
Monarch Butterfly
Northern Bobwhite, Grasslands & Savannas
Northeast Turtles
Sage Grouse
Shorebirds of Louisiana Wetlands
Southwestern Willow Flycatcher
Yazoo Darter
Companion Sites
Applcc
Conservation Design
Conservation Planning Atlas
Conservation Planning and GIS Resources
Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture
Ecosystem Benefits and Risks
Energy
Nature and Society
Imperiled Aquatic Species for the UTRB
North Atlantic LCC
Science Applications Online Learning
Southeast Aquatic Resources Partnership
Tennessee River Basin
Whitewater to Bluewater
Skip to content.
|
Skip to navigation
Search Site
only in current section
Advanced Search…
Sections
Home
The Strategy
Maps
Biodiversity Hotspots and the UTRB
Map of Federally Listed Aquatic Species in Virginia Portion of UTRB
Map of Federally Listed Species within the UTRB in Tennessee
Map of Federally Listed Species within the UTRB in North Carolina
Reports & Documents
News & Information
Outreach Documents
Webinars and Presentations
Team and Partner Workspace
Annual Project Planning Meeting Materials
Communications
Upper Tennessee River Basin Strategy Communications Subteam - March 2016 Call
Maps and Graphics
Reports and Reference Materials
Literature Cited
Personal tools
Log in
Jump to Child Site
Landscape Partnership
Aquatics
BirdLocale
Black Duck
Bobscapes
Bog Turtle
Eastern Deciduous Forests
Eastern Hellbender
Ecosystem Benefits & Risks
Energy
GIS & Conservation Planning Toolkit
Golden-Winged Warbler
Grasslands and Savannas
Imperiled Aquatic Species Conservation Strategy for the Upper TN River Basin
Nature and Society
NatureScape
Northern Bobwhite Quail
SE FireMap
The Anchor Approach to Connectivity
The Literature Gateway
Western Landscapes
Wildland Fire
Working Lands for Wildlife
You are here:
Home
Info
Search results
Subscribe to an always-updated RSS feed.
6
items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type
Select All/None
Page
Event
File
Google Doc
HTML Tile
Image
Importer
Link
News Item
Organization
Person
Message Board
Comment
Forum
Product
Project
RSS Tile
Slider Item
Spatial Data
Tile Page
Video
Story
Zip File
New items since
Yesterday
Last week
Last month
Ever
Sort by
relevance
·
date (newest first)
·
alphabetically
Map of Federally Listed Aquatic Species in Virginia Portion of UTRB
by
Jessica Rhodes
—
published
Apr 10, 2015
—
last modified
Jun 02, 2025 01:11 PM
— filed under:
Mussels
,
Fish
,
Aquatic
,
Map Products
,
UTRB
Map depicting listed and candidate aquatic species in the Upper Tennessee hydrologic sub-unit of Virginia.
Located in
Maps
Map of Federally Listed Species within the UTRB in Tennessee
by
Jessica Rhodes
—
published
Apr 10, 2015
—
last modified
Jun 02, 2025 01:11 PM
— filed under:
Aquatic
,
Mussels
,
Fish
,
Map Products
,
Endangered Species
,
UTRB
Map of Listed and candidate aquatic species in the Upper Tennessee hydrologic sub-unit of Tennessee.
Located in
Maps
Map of Listed, Proposed, and Candidate Mussels in the UTRB
by
Jessica Rhodes
—
published
Apr 14, 2015
—
last modified
Jun 02, 2025 01:11 PM
— filed under:
Mussels
,
Aquatic
,
Map Products
,
UTRB
Map depicting the number of listed, proposed, and candidate mussel species within each 12-digit HUC within the Upper Tennessee River Basin. Occurrences include extant and historical records. Areas within the UTRB boundary not shaded by a color in the key have no records of imperiled mussel species occurrences.
Located in
Maps
Map of Listed, Proposed, and Candidate Fish and Mussels in the UTRB
by
Jessica Rhodes
—
published
Apr 14, 2015
—
last modified
Jun 02, 2025 01:11 PM
— filed under:
Mussels
,
Fish
,
Aquatic
,
Map Products
,
UTRB
Map depicting the number of listed, proposed, and candidate fish and mussel species within each 12-digit HUC within the Upper Tennessee River Basin. Occurrences include extant and historical records. Areas within the UTRB boundary not shaded by a color in the key have no records of imperiled fish and mussel species occurrences.
Located in
Maps
Plan for the Population Restoration and Conservation of Imperiled Freshwater Mollusks of the Cumberland Region
by
Jessica Rhodes
—
published
Jun 22, 2015
—
last modified
Jun 02, 2025 01:11 PM
— filed under:
Mussels
,
Aquatic
,
Plan
,
Scientific Publications
The goal of this Plan is to provide a framework for the restoration of freshwater mollusk resources and their ecological functions to appropriate reaches of the Cumberlandian Region through the reintroduction, augmentation (R/A) and controlled propagation of priority mollusks. The Plan prioritizes propagation and R/A activities for Region mollusks and provides guidelines for resource managers and recovery partners. The Plan is not a legal document and is not intended to replace or supersede published recovery plans for listed mollusks.
Located in
Reports & Documents
Population Performance Criteria to Evaluate Reintroduction and Recovery of Two Endangered Mussel Species, Epioblasma brevidens and Epioblasma capsaeformis
by
Jessica Rhodes
—
published
Jun 22, 2015
—
last modified
Jun 02, 2025 01:11 PM
— filed under:
Mussels
,
Tennessee
,
Aquatic
,
UTRB
Genetic and demographic modeling of two endangered mussel species, Epioblasma brevidens and E. capsaeformis, in the Clinch River, U.S.A., was conducted to determine quantitative criteria to evaluate performance of extant and reintroduced populations. Reintroduction modelling indicated that the initial population size created during a 5 year build-up phase greatly affected final population size at 25 years, being similar to the population size at the end of the build-up phase, especially when population growth rate was low. Excluding age 0 individuals, age 1 juveniles or recruits on average comprised approximately 11% and 15% of a stable population of each species, respectively. Age-class distribution of a stable or growing population was characterized by multiple cohorts, including juvenile recruits, sub-adults, and adults. Because of current barriers to dispersal and the low dispersal capability of some mussel species, reintroductions will play a prominent role in restoring populations in the United States.
Located in
Reports & Documents