Fish health in the Peace, Athabasca and Slave river systems Kevin J. CashWade N. GibbonsJohn Carey OriginalPaper Pages: 77 - 86
Interactive effects of nutrients and contaminants from pulp mill effluents on riverine benthos Joseph M. CulpCheryl L. PodemskiKevin J. Cash OriginalPaper Pages: 67 - 75
Nutrient enrichment of northern rivers in response to pulp mill and municipal discharges Patricia A. ChambersAlec R. DaleMax L. Bothwell OriginalPaper Pages: 53 - 66
Contaminant sources, distribution and fate in the Athabasca, Peace and Slave River Basins, Canada Frederick J. WronaJohn CareyEd McCauley OriginalPaper Pages: 39 - 51
Dissolved oxygen decline in ice-covered rivers of northern Alberta and its effects on aquatic biota Patricia A. ChambersScott BrownAlain Pietroniro OriginalPaper Pages: 27 - 38
Multiple-hydrologic stressors of a northern delta ecosystem Terry D. ProwseF. Malcolm Conly OriginalPaper Pages: 17 - 26
The Northern River Basins Study: context and design William D. GummerKevin J. CashTerry D. Prowse OriginalPaper Pages: 7 - 16
Integrated assessment of ecosystem integrity of large northern rivers: the Northern Rivers Basins Study example Joseph M. CulpKevin J. CashFrederick J. Wrona OriginalPaper Pages: 1 - 5
Impacts of anthropogenic stresses on the early development stages of seaweeds Susana M. CoelhoJan W. RijstenbilMurray T. Brown OriginalPaper Pages: 317 - 333
Environmental risk assessment of anthropogenic activity in the deep-sea Ahmed AhnertChristian Borowski OriginalPaper Pages: 299 - 315
Impacts of anthropogenic stress on rocky intertidal communities T.P. CroweR.C. ThompsonS.J. Hawkins OriginalPaper Pages: 273 - 297
Evaluating stress in rocky shore and shallow reef habitats using the macrofauna of kelp holdfasts Stephen D.A. Smith OriginalPaper Pages: 259 - 272
Secondary and tertiary stress responses to BKME exposure in the St. Maurice River fish populations M.M. GagnonD. BussièresJ.J. Dodson OriginalPaper Pages: 247 - 257
Impact of bleached kraft pulp mill effluent on benthic community structure in relation to environmental factors Paul K. SibleyD.G. DixonD.R. Barton OriginalPaper Pages: 229 - 246
Exposure of juvenile chinook and chum salmon to chemical contaminants in the Hylebos Waterway of Commencement Bay, Tacoma, Washington Carla M. StehrDonald W. BrownTracy K. Collier OriginalPaper Pages: 215 - 227
Species-abundance-biomass responses by estuarine macrobenthos to sediment chemical contamination C. F. RakocinskiS. S. BrownJ. K. Summers OriginalPaper Pages: 201 - 214
Biological responses of the sea urchin, Arbacia punctulata, to lead contamination for an estuarine ecological risk assessment Diane NacciJonathan SerbstRonert K. Johnston OriginalPaper Pages: 187 - 199
Projecting population-level response of purple sea urchins to lead contamination for an estuarine ecological risk assessment T.R. GleasonW.R. MunnsD.E. Nacci OriginalPaper Pages: 177 - 185
A research strategy for using stream microcosms in ecotoxicology: Integrating experiments at different levels of biological organization with field data Joseph M. CulpCheryl L. PodemskiRichard B. Lowell OriginalPaper Pages: 167 - 176
Bioenergetic food webs as a means of linking toxicological effects across scales of ecological organization Daren M. Carlisle OriginalPaper Pages: 155 - 165
Predator/prey interactions: A link between the individual level and both higher and lower level effects of toxicants in aquatic ecosystems Judith S. WeisGraeme SmithCeline Santiago-Bass OriginalPaper Pages: 145 - 153
Relationship between genotoxicity, mutagenicity, and fish community structure in a contaminated stream Christopher W. TheodorakisCarol D. SwartzS. Marshall Adams OriginalPaper Pages: 131 - 143
Integrating effects of stressors across levels of biological organization: examples using organophosphorus insecticide mixtures in field-level exposures P.K. SibleyM.J. ChappelK. Liber OriginalPaper Pages: 117 - 130
Integrating effects of contaminants across levels of biological organization: an overview William H. Clements Editorial Introduction Pages: 113 - 116
Stress in seabirds: causes, consequences and diagnostic value David R. ThompsonKeith C. Hamer OriginalPaper Pages: 91 - 109
Response of marine microbial communities to anthropogenic stress Timothy Edgcumbe Ford OriginalPaper Pages: 75 - 89
Broad-scale disturbance of intertidal and shallow sublittoral soft-sediment habitats; effects on the benthic macrofauna J.I. EllisA. NorkkoS.F. Thrush OriginalPaper Pages: 57 - 74
Stress in estuarine communities: Lessons from the highly-impacted Bilbao estuary (Spain) José Ignacio Saiz-SalinasJosé Antonio González-Oreja OriginalPaper Pages: 43 - 55
Surrogates in marine benthic investigations ‐ which taxonomic unit to target? Frode OlsgardPaul J. Somerfield OriginalPaper Pages: 25 - 42
Importance of experimental design in detecting and measuring stresses in marine populations A.J. Underwood OriginalPaper Pages: 3 - 24
The relative influence of hypoxia, anoxia, andassociated environmental factors as determinants ofmacrobenthic community structure in aNorthern Gulf of Mexico estuary David A. FlemerWilliam L. KruczynskiCharles M. Bundrick OriginalPaper Pages: 311 - 327
Reproductive injury in English Sole (Pleuronectes vetulus) from the Hylebos Waterway, Commencement Bay, Washington Lyndal L. JohnsonSean Y. SolTracy K. Collier OriginalPaper Pages: 289 - 310
Impact of introduced carp (Cyprinus carpio)in subtropical shallow ponds in Central Mexico Luis ZambranoMartin R. PerrowVictor Aguirre-Hidalgo OriginalPaper Pages: 281 - 288
Environmental perturbation and the structure and functioning of a tropical aquatic ecosystem G.J. PietJ. Vijverberg OriginalPaper Pages: 265 - 279
Assimilative capacity — the key to sustainable use of the planet John Cairns Jr. OriginalPaper Pages: 259 - 263
Recovery in aquatic ecosystems: an overview of knowledge and needs M. Power OriginalPaper Pages: 253 - 257
Improving sampling designs for measuring restoration in aquatic habitats M.G. Chapman OriginalPaper Pages: 235 - 251
Development of community metrics to evaluate recovery of Minnesota wetlands Susan M. GalatowitschDiane C. WhitedJohn R. Tester OriginalPaper Pages: 217 - 234
Acid rain — perspectives on lake recovery Wendel (Bill) KellerJohn M. GunnNorman D. Yan OriginalPaper Pages: 207 - 216
Recovery of ecosystems and their components following exposure to pollution M.H. Depledge OriginalPaper Pages: 199 - 206
Effects of emission reductions from the Sudbury smelters on the recovery of acid- and metal-damaged lakes Wendel (Bill) KellerJocelyne H. HeneberryJohn M. Gunn OriginalPaper Pages: 189 - 198
Introduction Recovery in Aquatic Ecosystems: Considerations for definition and measurement OriginalPaper Pages: 179 - 180
Pesticide toxicity endpoints in aquatic ecosystems David SimonStuart HelliwellKevin Robards OriginalPaper Pages: 159 - 177