Connectivity and river operations
International Conference on River Connectivity (Fish Passage 2018)
Days
Monday, 10th December
Tuesday, 11th December
Wednesday, 12th December
Thursday, 13th December
Friday, 14th December
Tracks
Hydropower and Fish Symposium
Fish passage in tropical systems
Fish Passage in the Mekong Basin
Non-salmonid Fish Passage
Best practice diversion screening
Fish passage engineering advancements
Fish Passage and Connectivity monitoring techniques
Dam removal
Road Crossing Remediation
Reconnecting with floodplains and wetlands
Estuarine connectivity and passage
Policy – the Achilles-heel of river connectivity
Connectivity and river operations
Search
Speakers
River connectivity and fish passage I
11:40AM - 12:40PM
Tuesday, 11th December
Theatrette
Chair: Luiz Silva
Fishway targets should support population viability - Metapopulations, habitat shifts and gene flow
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Martin A Wilkes
Why landscape connectivity matters to fish populations.
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John Koehn
Move it or lose it: restoring movement pathways for fish in freshwater rivers
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Jason Thiem
River connectivity and fish passage II
1:30PM - 3:10PM
Tuesday, 11th December
Theatrette
Chair: Jason Thiem
Partial migration: some causes, consequences and connectivity
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Anders Nilsson
Exploring outcomes and assumptions of successful fish passage in the Murray-Darling Basin using individual-based modelling.
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Daniel P. Svozil
The migrations of amphidromous species: implications for fish passage and water infrastructure
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Matt G. Jarvis
Development of a fish passage inventory and evaluation of success rates of major fish passages on fish movements through barriers in regulated river systems of China
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Jinlong Liu
De-congesting London: Improving River Connectivity for Lowland River Fishes in Urban Streams
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Angus J Lothian
River connectivity and fish passage III
3:40PM - 5:20PM
Tuesday, 11th December
Theatrette
Chair: Brenton Zampatti
Sequential fishways reconnect a coastal river
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Meaghan L Duncan
Fish barrier removal and river connectivity support glenelg river tupong populations.
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Stephen Ryan
Monitoring the Penobscot River Restoration Project: Baseline Data to Inform Ecosystem Response
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Molly L Payne Wynne
Fishways provide catchment-scale improvements to a diadromous fish population upstream of a barrier
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Frank Amtstaetter
Barriers benefiting biodiversity: when the lack of upstream fish passage is equally important
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Tarmo A Raadik