Browsing by Author "Death, Russell G."
Now showing items 1-5 of 7
-
Do productivity and disturbance interact to modulate macroinvertebrate diversity in streams?
Tonkin, Jonathan D.; Death, Russell G.; Collier, Kevin J. (Springer, 2013)Although disturbance and productivity are clearly strong influences on lotic diversity, rarely have their interactive effects been studied in running water systems. We hypothesised that the presence or absence of canopy ... -
Does artificial intelligence modelling have anything to offer traditional management of freshwater food resources?
Death, Russell G.; Collier, Kevin J.; Hudson, Maui; Canning, Adam; Niessen, Miriam; David, Bruno O.; Catlin, Alicia; Hamer, Mark; Pingram, Mochael (Environmental Research Institute, University of Waikato, 2017)Management of freshwater systems and the ecosystem services they provide has become a multi-stakeholder activity. This requires information on resources and how to manage them to be disseminated to a wide range of users. ... -
Macroinvertebrate–pressure relationships in boatable New Zealand rivers: Influence of underlying environment and sampling substrate
Collier, Kevin J.; Clapcott, Joanne E.; David, Bruno O.; Death, Russell G.; Kelly, David; Leathwick, John R.; Young, Roger G. (John Wiley & Sons, 2012)Responses of macroinvertebrate communities to human pressure are poorly known in large rivers compared with wadeable streams, in part because of variable substrate composition and the need to disentangle pressure responses ... -
Measuring stream macroinvertebrate responses to gradients of vegetation cover: when is enough enough?
Death, Russell G.; Collier, Kevin J. (Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2010)1. Management of stream biodiversity is often tightly linked with the restoration and protection of riparian and catchment vegetation. Despite that, there are no established guidelines on how much forest should be retained ... -
Potential science tools to support mahinga kai decision-making in freshwater management
Collier, Kevin J.; Death, Russell G.; Hamilton, David P.; Quinn, John M. (Environmental Research Institute, The University of Waikato, 2014)Mahinga kai is a key value for freshwater management that needs to be articulated in objective setting for environmental limits in the National Objectives Framework (NOF). Mahinga kai generally refers to indigenous freshwater ...
Co-authors for Russell G. Death
Russell G. Death has 19 co-authors in Research Commons.