CONTRIBUTORS ................................................... ix
PREFACE ...................................................... xiii
SECTION A: PHYSICAL PROCESSES
CHAPTER 1: LANDSCAPES AND RIVERSCAPES .......................... 3
Jack A. Stanford
CHAPTER 2: VALLEY SEGMENTS, STREAM REACHES, AND CHANNEL
UNITS .............................................. 23
Peter A. Bisson, David R. Montgomery, and John M.
Buffington
CHAPTER 3: DISCHARGE MEASUREMENTS AND STREAMFLOW ANALYSIS ..... 51
James A. Gore
CHAPTER 4: DYNAMICS OF FLOW ................................... 79
Robert W. Newbury and David J. Bates
CHAPTER 5: TEMPERATURE, LIGHT, AND OXYGEN .................... 103
F. Richard Hauer and Walter R. Hill
CHAPTER 6: HYPORHEIC ZONES ................................... 119
Clifford N. Dahm, H. Maurice Valett, Colden
V. Baxter, and William W. Woessner
SECTION B: MATERIAL TRANSPORT, UPTAKE, AND STORAGE
CHAPTER 7: FLUVIAL GEOMORPHIC PROCESSES ...................... 145
Mark S. Lorang and F. Richard Hauer
CHAPTER 8: SOLUTE DYNAMICS ................................... 169
Jackson R. Webster and H. Maurice Valett
CHAPTER 9: PHOSPHORUS LIMITATION, UPTAKE, AND TURNOVER IN
BENTHIC STREAM ALGAE .............................. 187
Alan D. Steinman and Patrick J. Mulholland
CHAPTER 10: NITROGEN LIMITATION AND UPTAKE .................... 213
Jennifer L. Tank, Melody J. Bernot, and Emma
J. Rosi-Marshall
CHAPTER 11: DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER .......................... 239
Stuart Findlay
CHAPTER 12: TRANSPORT AND STORAGE OF FPOM ..................... 249
J. Bruce Wallace, John J. Hutchens, Jr., and
Jack W. Grubaugh
CHAPTER 13: CPOM TRANSPORT, RETENTION, AND MEASUREMENT ........ 273
Gary A. Lamberti and Stanley V. Gregory
SECTION C: STREAM BIOTA
CHAPTER 14: HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA ............................ 293
Amelia K. Ward
CHAPTER 15: FUNGI: BIOMASS, PRODUCTION, AND SPORULATION OF
AQUATIC HYPHOMYCETES .............................. 311
Vladislav Gulis and Keller F. Suberkropp
CHAPTER 16: BENTHIC STREAM ALGAE: DISTRIBUTION AND
STRUCTURE ......................................... 327
Rex L. Lowe and Gina D. LaLiberte
CHAPTER 17: BIOMASS AND PIGMENTS OF BENTHIC ALGAE ............. 357
Alan D. Steinman, Gary A. Lamberti, and Peter
R. Leavitt
CHAPTER 18: MACROPHYTES AND BRYOPHYTES ....................... 381
William B. Bowden, Janice M. Glime, and Tenna
Riis
CHAPTER 19: MEIOFAUNA ........................................ 415
Margaret A. Palmer, David L. Strayer, and
Simon D. Rundle
CHAPTER 20: MACROINVERTEBRATES ............................... 435
F. Richard Hauer and Vincent H. Resh
CHAPTER 21: MACROINVERTEBRATE DISPERSAL ...................... 465
Leonard A. Smock
CHAPTER 22: ROLE OF FISH ASSEMBLAGES IN STREAM COMMUNITIES ... 489
Hiram W. Li and Judith L. Li
SECTION D: COMMUNITY INTERACTIONS
CHAPTER 23: PRIMARY PRODUCER-CONSUMER INTERACTIONS ........... 537
Gary A. Lamberti, Jack W. Feminella, and
Catherine M. Pringle
CHAPTER 24: PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTIONS ....................... 561
Barbara L. Peckarsky
CHAPTER 25: TROPHIC RELATIONSHIPS OF MACROINVERTEBRATES ...... 585
Richard WsMerritt and Kenneth W. Cummins
CHAPTER 26: TROPHIC RELATIONS OF STREAM FISHES ............... 611
Frances P. GehAckand William J. Matthews
CHAPTER 27: STREAM FOOD WEBS ................................. 637
Anne E. Hershey, KennetKFortino, Bruce J.
Peterson, and Amber J. Ulseth
SECTION E: ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES
CHAPTER 28: PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY AND COMMUNITY
RESPIRATION ....................................... 663
Thomas L. Bott
CHAPTER 29: SECONDARY PRODUCTION OF MACROINVERTEBRATES ........ 691
Arthur C. Benke and Alexander D. Huryn
CHAPTER 30: DECOMPOSITION OF LEAF MATERIAL .................... 711
E.F. Benfield
CHAPTER 31: RIPARIAN PROCESSES AND INTERACTIONS ............... 721
G. Wayne Minshall and Amanda Rugenski
CHAPTER 32: EFFECTS OF NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT ON PERIPHYTON ...... 743
Catherine M. Pringle and Frank J. Triska
CHAPTER 33: SURFACE-SUBSURFACE INTERACTIONS IN STREAMS ........ 761
Nancy B. Grimm, Colden V. Baxter, and Chelsea
L. Crenshaw
SECTION F: ECOSYSTEM QUALITY
CHAPTER 34: ECOLOGICAL ASSESSMENTS WITH BENTHIC ALGAE ......... 785
R. Jan Stevenson and Scott L. Rollins
CHAPTER 35: MACROINVERTEBRATES AS BIOTIC INDICATORS OF
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ............................. 805
James L. Carter, Vincent H. Resh, Morgan J.
Hannaford, and Marilyn J. Myers
CHAPTER 36: ESTABLISHING CAUSE-EFFECT RELATIONSHIPS IN
MULTI-STRESSOR ENVIRONMENTS ....................... 835
Joseph M. Culp and Donald J. Baird
INDEX ......................................................... 855
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