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Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
38
Citations
7966
World Ranking
6534
National Ranking
2209

Overview

Steven T. Lindley is affiliated with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States. Their research primarily focuses on environmental science, with notable contributions across several subfields including ecology, nature and landscape conservation, global and planetary change, oceanography, and water science and technology.

The scientist's recent publication record includes work on fish ecology and management studies, marine and fisheries research, marine bivalve and aquaculture studies, environmental DNA in biodiversity studies, hydrology and watershed management studies, aquaculture nutrition and growth, and isotope analysis in ecology.

Frequent publication venues for Steven T. Lindley include:

  • Frontiers in Marine Science
  • Technical Report
  • Ecography
  • Fisheries Oceanography
  • Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences

Recent papers by Steven T. Lindley include:

  • "Vulnerability to climate change of managed stocks in the California Current large marine ecosystem," 2023, Frontiers in Marine Science
  • "Implementing Ecosystem-Based Management Principles in the Design of a Salmon Ocean Ecology Program," 2020, Frontiers in Marine Science
  • "Globally coordinated acoustic aquatic animal tracking reveals unexpected, ecologically important movements across oceans, lakes and rivers," 2023, Ecography
  • "Differences in growth and condition of juvenile Oncorhynchus mykiss related to sex and a migration-associated genomic region," 2020, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
  • "Size-selective predation effects on juvenile Chinook salmon cohort survival off Central California evaluated with an individual-based model," 2023, Fisheries Oceanography

Steven T. Lindley collaborates frequently with several researchers, including:

  • Nathan J. Mantua
  • David D. Huff
  • John C. Field
  • Carson A. Jeffres
  • Rachel C. Johnson

Best Publications

  • Testing the iron hypothesis in ecosystems of the equatorial Pacific Ocean

    J. H. Martin;K. H. Coale;K. S. Johnson;K. S. Johnson;S. E. Fitzwater

  • Iron and grazing constraints on primary production in the central equatorial Pacific: An EqPac synthesis

    Michael R. Lundry;Richard T. Barber;Robert R. Bidare;Fei Chai

  • Iron limitation of phytoplankton photosynthesis in the equatorial Pacific Ocean

    Zbigniew S. Kolber;Richard T. Barber;Kenneth H. Coale;Steve E. Fitzwateri

  • Sex-dependent dominance maintains migration supergene in rainbow trout

    Devon E Pearse;Nicola Barson;Torfinn Nome;Guangtu Gao

  • Primary productivity and its regulation in the equatorial Pacific during and following the 1991–1992 El Niño

    Richard T. Barber;Marta P. Sanderson;Steven T. Lindley;Fei Chai

  • Framework for Assessing Viability of Threatened and Endangered Chinook Salmon and Steelhead in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Basin

    Steven T. Lindley;Robert S. Schick;Ethan Mora

  • Directed connectivity among fish populations in a riverine network

    Robert S. Schick;Robert S. Schick;Steven T Lindley

  • What Caused the Sacramento River Fall Chinook Stock Collapse

    Steven T. Lindley;Churchill B. Grimes;Michael S. Mohr;William Thornton Peterson

  • In vitro O2 fluxes compared with 14C production and other rate terms during the JGOFS Equatorial Pacific experiment

    Michael Bender;Joe Orchardo;Mary-Lynn Dickson;Richard Barber

  • Climate vulnerability assessment for Pacific salmon and steelhead in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem

    Lisa G Crozier;Michelle M McClure;Tim J. Beechie;Steven J. Bograd

  • HIDDEN PROCESS MODELS FOR ANIMAL POPULATION DYNAMICS

    K. B. Newman;S. T. Buckland;S. T. Lindley;L. Thomas

  • Origin and maintenance of a high nitrate condition in the equatorial Pacific

    Fei Chai;Steven T. Lindley;Richard T. Barber

  • Marine Migration of North American Green Sturgeon

    Steven T. Lindley;Mary L. Moser;Daniel L. Erickson;Michael Belchik

  • Use of Washington Estuaries by Subadult and Adult Green Sturgeon

    Mary L. Moser;Steven T. Lindley

  • Population Status of North American Green Sturgeon, Acipenser medirostris

    Peter B. Adams;Churchill Grimes;Joseph E. Hightower;Steven T. Lindley

  • Diurnal responses of photosynthesis and fluorescence in Ulva rotundata acclimated to sun and shade in outdoor culture

    WJ Henley;G. Levavasseur;LA Franklin;ST Lindley

  • Historical Population Structure of Central Valley Steelhead and Its Alteration by Dams

    Steven T. Lindley;Robert S. Schick;Aditya Agrawal;Matthew Goslin

  • Migration of green sturgeon, Acipenser medirostris, in the Sacramento River

    Joseph C. Heublein;John T. Kelly;John T. Kelly;Carlos E. Crocker;A. Peter Klimley

  • Phytoplankton photosynthesis parameters along 140°W in the equatorial Pacific

    Steven T. Lindley;Steven T. Lindley;Robert R. Bidigare;Richard T. Barber

  • Viability assessment for Pacific salmon and steelhead listed under the Endangered Species Act : southwest

    Thomas H. Williams;Brian C. Spence;David A. Boughton;Rachel C. Johnson

Frequent Co-Authors

Richard T. Barber
Richard T. Barber Duke University
Fei Chai
Fei Chai Ministry of Land and Resources of the People's Republic of China
William T. Peterson
William T. Peterson National Marine Fisheries Service
Nathan J. Mantua
Nathan J. Mantua National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Bernie May
Bernie May University of California, Davis
Kenneth S. Johnson
Kenneth S. Johnson Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Balaji Rajagopalan
Balaji Rajagopalan University of Colorado Boulder
Robert R. Bidigare
Robert R. Bidigare University of Hawaii at Manoa
Gary H. Thorgaard
Gary H. Thorgaard Washington State University
Ben F. Koop
Ben F. Koop University of Victoria

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