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David R. Edds

Researcher at Emporia State University

Publications -  53
Citations -  1020

David R. Edds is an academic researcher from Emporia State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Noturus placidus & Madtom. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 51 publications receiving 957 citations. Previous affiliations of David R. Edds include Oklahoma State University–Stillwater & University of Oklahoma.

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Effects of Lowhead Dams on Riffle-Dwelling Fishes and Macroinvertebrates in a Midwestern River

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of lowhead dams on fishes and macroinvertebrates were examined by using a multivariate analysis of variance, which indicated that habitat, but not physicochemistry, varied immediately upstream and downstream from the dams, with resultant effects on macroinvetebrate and fish assemblages.
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Fish Assemblage Structure and Environmental Correlates in Nepal's Gandaki River

David R. Edds
- 11 Feb 1993 - 
TL;DR: Detrended canonical correspondence analysis indicated that geography, water quality, and stream hydraulics were the principal physiochemical correlates of fish assemblage structure in Nepal's Gandaki River.
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Spatiotemporal Patterns of Fish Assemblage Structure in a River Impounded by Low-Head Dams

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied spatiotemporal patterns of fish assemblage structure in the Neosho River, a system impounded by low-head dams and found that the spatial variation in the assemblages was related to the location of dams.
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Current status of native fish species in Kansas

TL;DR: A re-evaluation of the status of fishes in Kansas suggests that 54 of the 116 native species should be assigned special conservation status due to substantial declines in distribution or abundance and/or their rarity in the state.
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Resource use by large catfishes in a reservoir: is there evidence for interactive segregation and innate differences?

TL;DR: Blue catfish and channel catfish in Lake Texoma showed very high overlap in food use, but substantial differences in use of habitat during the year, which probably also reflect evolved, historical differences in ecology of the two species.