Fish Ecology

The Impact of Anthropogenic Disturbance on Fishes in Ozark Headwater Streams – Kayleigh Smith

Quantifying Relationships between Prairie Chub Machrybopsis Australis Life History and Hydrologic Variables within the Upper Red River Basin. – Maeghan Wedgeworth

Flow-Ecology Relationships Vary across Wet-Dry Cycles of the Southern Great Plains – Shannon Brewer

Evidence of Mating System and Sex-Based Life History Characteristics of Central Appalachian Brook Trout – Christopher Schwinghamer

Development of a Translocation Program for the Genetic Recovery and Conservation of the Threatened Leopard Darter – Jeffrey Quinn

Assessment of Ouachita Darter and Species of Greatest Conservation Need in the Little Missouri and Ouachita Rivers – Maxwell Hartman

The Swimming Performance of Freshwater Drum (Aplodinotus grunniens) in Various Temperature and Dissolved Oxygen Treatments – Colin Laubach

The Effects of Prey Specialization Among Individual Brook Trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) on Relative Condition and Maintenance Ration in Appalachian Headwater Streams – Erin Thayer

Reassessment of Arkansas Crayfish and Shrimp Conservation Status – Brian Wagner

Darters Bought the Llama Farm: State Agency Partnerships in Conservation – Justin Stroman

Quantifying Macroinvertebrate Diversity in Nests Constructed By Bluehead Chubs – Rachel Moore

Regional Biodiversity of Freshwater Fish Is More Strongly Controlled By Dispersal at Low Latitudes and By the Environment at High Latitudes – Joseph Mruzek

Establishment of Monopterus Cuchia in East Texas – Alice Best

Biotic Homogenization of Fish Assemblages in the Eleven Point River Basin and Its Association with Land Use/Land Cover – George Gavrielides

Ecological Niche-Modeling of the Sickle Darter (Percina Williamsi) in the Upper Tennessee River Basin. – Kyler Hecke

Variation in Habitat Use and Body Condition of Etheostoma Caeruleum and Etheostoma Fragi in the Strawberry River, Arkansas – Blake Mitchell

Thermal Performance of Growth at Consumption Maximum (C-Max) and Routine Metabolic Rate (RMR) in Brook Trout Salvelinus Fontinalis from Four Populations in Central Appalachia – Cory Hartman