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Showing papers in "Transactions of the American Microscopical Society in 1955"



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An investigation of the periphyton complex in a riffle area on the Uest Gallatin River, Montana, from August 1952 through February 1954 was made by as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: An investigation was made of the periphyton complex in a riffle area on the Uest Gallatin River, Montana, from August 1952 through February 1954. The riffle gradient in 1954 was 1.76 feet per 100 lineal feet and average riffle depth during the study period was 12 inches. One square centimeter samples were collected from formalin-treated stones placed in the riffle. Some random stones were sampled as controls and to supplement treated stones washed from the area. . From August 1952 to March 1953 one periphyton sample was collected from each station while two samples were collected from each station from March 1953 through February 1954. Statistical analysis was made to determine the number of \"count units\" needed to give satisfactory precision in making estimates of organisms per ml sub-sample. Gross seasonal changes of the periphyton complex are described. Three divisions of algae representing 34 species and live phyla of animals representing 35 species were found in periphyton. Chrysophyta was the most abundant algae and Diptera was the most frequently represented animal. A sharp increase in number of organisms occurred in August-September and peaked in November. A decline occurred in Dec-ember-January and a minor peak appeared in March. Another decline occurred in May. Organisms were found at a minimum in July. Diatoms were superseded in number by a green algae in February 1953 and in July 1953 by a blue-green algae. Two peaks occurred in Tendepedidae larvae in 1952 and one in 1953. One peak in Simulium larvae was found in January 1954. The abundance of organisms in relation to temperature, ice formation, discharge, turbidity and velocity are considered. AN INVESTIGATION OF THE PERIPHYTON IN A RIFFLE OF THE VEST GALLATIN RIVER, MONTANA by . RONALD B. ODMTCW V A THESIS Submitted to the Graduate Faculty I* p a r tia l fu lfillm ent of the requirements fo r a degree of •' . 1L Master of Science in Fish and VBLldlife Management at Montana State College

40 citations













Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An intensive trout population study made on Prickley Pear Creek, Montana during the summers of 1949, 1950, and continued in 1951, provided an unusual opportunity to collect trout for age, growth, and condition in relation to population changes during the three years.
Abstract: An intensive trout population study made on Prickley Pear Creek, Montana during the summers of 1949, 1950 (Stefanich, 1952), and continued in 1951, provided an unusual opportunity to collect trout for age, growth, and condition in relation to population changes during the three years. The samples collected represent near total populations for the sections covered. Alvord (1954) studied the scale characters of known age trout in Prickley Pear Creek, and Kathrein (1951) investigated age and growth of rainbow and brown trout from a section of the Missouri River adjacent to the mouth of Prickley Pear Creek. Purkett (1951) reported on the growth rate of trout in relation to elevation and temperature on three Montana streams. Two of the most important age and growth studies involving whole populations of trout are those of Shetter and Leonard (1943) in Hunt Creek, Michigan, and Schuck (1945) in Crystal Creek, New York. Shetter and Hazzard (1939) investigated age but not growth of trout populations in three Michigan trout streams.