The Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit (est. 1963) is a partnership among the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, Montana State University, and the U.S. Geological Survey.
Research of the Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit will continue to focus on applied fisheries-management problems and issues. Our studies are initiated in response to the needs of the Cooperators and other management agencies and are designed to provide information useful in directly improving management of aquatic resources. Technical areas of special emphasis include habitat associations and requirements of fishes, large-river fish assemblages, native aquatic community restoration, effects of exotic fishes on native species, and regulated-river and reservoir fisheries. Other topics are addressed as needed, in keeping with the Cooperative Research Program's mission to best meet the needs of the Cooperators by remaining flexible and open to new areas of inquiry, as exemplified by our current emphasis on prairie streams. When Cooperator's needs occur outside our areas of expertise, we will recruit the assistance of appropriate University faculty.
Unit staff will advance the training and education of graduate students in fisheries science at Montana State University by teaching up to one graduate-level course per year, chairing graduate committees of Unit students, and serving on graduate committees of non-Unit students. In-service training will be provided to Cooperators and other agencies as the need exists.
Gerrard strain Rainbow Trout are not piscivorous in a shallow, polymictic reservoir Gerrard strain Rainbow Trout are not piscivorous in a shallow, polymictic reservoir
Plasticity in the reproductive biology of Yellowstone cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus virginalis bouvieri in Yellowstone Lake following lake trout Salvelinus namaycush invasion Plasticity in the reproductive biology of Yellowstone cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus virginalis bouvieri in Yellowstone Lake following lake trout Salvelinus namaycush invasion
Niche partitioning among three apex piscivorous fishes: Evidence of limited intraguild predation Niche partitioning among three apex piscivorous fishes: Evidence of limited intraguild predation
Warmwater fish in rivers Warmwater fish in rivers
Spatial and temporal variability of movements among sympatric salmonids in an unfragmented inland watershed Spatial and temporal variability of movements among sympatric salmonids in an unfragmented inland watershed
A scaled Denil fishway for upstream passage of Arctic Grayling A scaled Denil fishway for upstream passage of Arctic Grayling
The Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit (est. 1963) is a partnership among the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, Montana State University, and the U.S. Geological Survey.
Research of the Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit will continue to focus on applied fisheries-management problems and issues. Our studies are initiated in response to the needs of the Cooperators and other management agencies and are designed to provide information useful in directly improving management of aquatic resources. Technical areas of special emphasis include habitat associations and requirements of fishes, large-river fish assemblages, native aquatic community restoration, effects of exotic fishes on native species, and regulated-river and reservoir fisheries. Other topics are addressed as needed, in keeping with the Cooperative Research Program's mission to best meet the needs of the Cooperators by remaining flexible and open to new areas of inquiry, as exemplified by our current emphasis on prairie streams. When Cooperator's needs occur outside our areas of expertise, we will recruit the assistance of appropriate University faculty.
Unit staff will advance the training and education of graduate students in fisheries science at Montana State University by teaching up to one graduate-level course per year, chairing graduate committees of Unit students, and serving on graduate committees of non-Unit students. In-service training will be provided to Cooperators and other agencies as the need exists.