Multimedia Collection

Role of Captive Breeding/Artificial Propagation in Restoration of Endangered Species

VHS
860 minutes
SH155.6 .R541 1995 tapes 1-10 + book

Conference: October 11-13, 1995 in Newport, Oregon.
Organizers: Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, U.S Fish and Wildlife Service, United States. National Marine Fisheries Service.

  • tape 1. Introductory comments / Michael Gilpin, Robin Waples [and] Management panel.
  • tape 2. Hatcheries and species of special concern in Montana / Robb Leary [and] Linking ex situ and in situ conservation / Oliver Ryder.
  • tape 3. Genetic risk frameworks in conservation policies for wild and artificially propagated salmon / Kenneth Currens.
  • tape 4. Captive broodstock technology and its application to Redfish Lake sockeye salmon / Thomas Flagg, et al. [and] Conservation genetics : Gila topminnows, Florida panthers, and Mexican wolves / Phillip Hedrick.
  • tape 5. Columbia basin salmon management under ESA : neglecting the manageable while trying to save the unsavable / Phillip Mundy and Daniel Goodman [and] From bottleneck to metapopulation : recovery of the Tule elk in California / Dale McCullough, Jon Fischer and Jonathan Ballou.
  • tape 6. Genetic, demographic and economic factors in extinction / Russell Lande [and] To propagate or not to propagate : toward a risk/benefit analysis for threatened salmon populations / Robin Waples and Jeff Hard.
  • tape 7. Local adaptation : fact and fiction / Michael Gilpin [and] Genetic models of captive breeding strategies for supplementing wild populations / Milo Adkison and Ray Hilborn.
  • tape 8. Role of genetics, propagation, and stocking in the recovery of endangered fishes in the Upper Colorado River basin / Richard Wydoski [and] Salmonid enhancement program in British Columbia : experiences in the restoration of wild salmon populations / Brian Riddell, Ted Perry and Chris Wood.
  • tape 9. Summary and concluding comments / Michael Soule.
  • tape 10. Discussion panels.

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