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Book Summary of Energy Development in the Southwest: Problems of Water, Fish and Wildlife
in the Upper Colorado River Basin by Walter O. Spofford, Jr., Alfred L. Parker and Allen V. Kneese, eds.
Citation:
Energy Development in the Southwest: Problems of Water, Fish and Wildlife in the Upper Colorado River Basin, Walter O. Spofford, Jr., Alfred L. Parker, and Allen V. Kneese, (eds), (Washington DC: Resources for the Future, 1980), 541 pp.
This Book Summary written by: T.A. O'Lonergan, Conflict Research Consortium
Energy Development in the Southwest: Problems of Water, Fish and
Wildlife in the Upper Colorado River Basin is a comprehensive examination of
the effects on the species and habitat of the Colorado River
Basin of the development of energy sources, both hydroelectric power development
and surface coal mining. The text is supported by numerous tables, graphs, maps
and charts.
Energy Development in the Southwest: Problems of Water, Fish and
Wildlife in the Upper Colorado River Basin is the second volume of a two
volume work. It will be of interest to those who seek to broaden their
understanding of the threats to endangered species and habitats
in the Colorado River Basin posed by energy development in that region. The
work is divided into three parts each of which is comprised of works by several
authors addressing a central overarching topic. The first of these sections
focuses upon the impacts of water quality on fish and wildlife. The
first concern in this section is the influence of reduced streamflows on
water quality. This is followed by consideration of the potential
impacts of alterations in streamflow and water quality on fish
and microinvertebrates in the Upper Basin. Manuel Molles
examines the impacts of habitat alterations and introduced species
on the native fishes of the Upper Basin. The impacts of habitat
alterations on the endangered and threatened fishes of the Upper
Basin are also discussed. Loren D. Potter addresses the ecology
of Colorado reservoir shorelines prior to an examination of the impacts of
energy development on big game in Northwestern Colorado.
The second part of this work is an examination of fish and wildlife
management in the Upper Basin, with a focus upon evaluation considerations and
procedures. In this context, the potential impacts of energy development on
water resources in the Yampa River Basin are discussed. Richard A. Smith
offers predictions about the impacts of surface coal mining on
trout populations in the same river basin. Finally, habitat evaluation
procedures are considered. The final section addresses political
and legal institutions affecting the uses of the lands and waters in the
Upper Colorado River Basin. Specifically, implications for fish and wildlife
under institutional allocation schemes is examined. Energy
Development in the Southwest: Problems of Water, Fish and Wildlife in the Upper
Colorado River Basin is a collection of essays focused upon the biological
impacts of energy development in both the Colorado River Basin and the Yampa
River Basin which will be instructive to: professional biologists, hydrologists
and the well-informed reader.
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