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Data for this database were gathered from the following individuals, institutions and staff, and peer-reviewed literature or unpublished reports. Sources may be repeated if data or information was shared by individuals in multiple capacities.

Individuals:

Aaron David, Adam Baldinger, Al Grant, Al Smith, Alexa Maine, Alexander Rhodes, Amanda Droghini, Andra Love, Andre Martel, Art Bass, Art Bogan, Bengt Miller, Bill Shepard, Bob Brenner, Bob Wisseman, Bonnie Pryor, Brett Blundon, Brian Lang, Bruce Lang, Caitlin LaBar, Camm Swift, Carol Evans, Carol Gelvin-Reymiller, Carol Hughes, Celeste Mazzacano, Chris Hogle, Christina Piotrowski, Christine O’Brien, Christy Bills, Chuti Fiedler, Cole Lindsay, Cynthia Tait, Dale Swedberg, Daniel Bogan, Darci Rivers-Pankratz, Darcy McNamara, Dave Hopper, Dave Plawman, David Cook, David Cowles, David Jigour, David Kennedy, David Richards, David Stagliano, David Wolfe, Donna Allard, Donna Nez, Dorene MacCoy, Doug Nemeth, Doug Post, Ed Johannes, Emily Davis, Eric Starkey, Erin Kramer-Wilt, Erin Miller, Ethan Nedeau, Frank Staller, Fred Schueler, Gary Lester, Gordon Edwards, Greg Wilson, Heather Robeson, Jamie Glasgow, Jason Dunham, Jayne Brim Box, Jeanette Howard, Jeff Gottfried, Jeff Johnson, Jeff Sorensen, Jennifer Heron, Jennifer Parsons, Jennifer Vanderhoof, Jeremy Tiemann, Jerry Mitchell, Joanne Richter, Jochen Gerber, Joe Slusark, Joel Sauder, John Fleckenstein, Jon Ives, Jon Mageroy, Jonathan Scordino, Jonathan Young, Jose Bartoszek, Joseph Furnish, Justin Alvarez, Justin Garwood, Justin Smith, Justin Peterson, Kai Palenscar, Karen Mock, Kate Macneale, Kathy Thornburgh, Katrina Stipec, Keith Bensen, Kelly Toy, Kendra Chan, Kevin Aitkin, Kevin Cummings, Larry Dalton, Larry Scofield, Laura Guderyahn, LaVonne Rhyneer, Lea Gelling, Lee Cain, Linda Ward, Lindsey Groves, Lisa Torunski, Lorrie Haley, Maria Ellis, Mark LaRiviere, Mark Mouser, Mary Hanson, Matt Bowser, Matthew Baerwalde, Michele Huff, Michelle McSwain, Michelle Steg-Geltner, Mike Mulvey, Mindy Allen, Molly Hallock, Nancy Duncan, Nicole Cartwright, Paul Norwood, Paul Pickett, Peter Bahls, Peter Hovingh, Philip Mathias, Ray Heller, Ray Kinney, Ray Perkins, Ray Temple, Renee Scherdnick, Rollie Schmitten, Ron Constable, Roy Iwai, Ryan Houston, Ryan Merle, Sandi Bunyard, Sarah Brandy, Scott Loarie, Shana Gross, Shanda McGraw, Shelly Miller, Stephanie Eckard, Stephen Conroy, Steve Lysne, Steve Stampfli, Taehwan Lee, Teal Waterstrat, Terry Frest, Terry Myers, Thomas Quinn, Timothy Pearce, Todd Confer, Todd Folsom, Tom Burke, Tom Watters, Tony Macleod, Travis Williams, Trevor Swanson, Tyler Schade, and Wendy Walsh.

Institutions and staff:

Alaska Natural Heritage Program, Arizona Department of Fish and Game, B.C. Ministry of Environment Conservation Data Centre, Bailey-Matthews Shell Museum, Barrick Museum, Brigham Young University, California Academy of Sciences Department of Invertebrate Zoology and Geology, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, California Natural Diversity Database, Canada Ministry of the Environment, Canadian Biodiversity Information, Canadian Museum of Nature, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Cincinnati Museum Center, City of Portland, City of Redmond, College of Western Idaho, Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation Mussel Project, Deixis Consultants, ENTRIX, Field Museum of Natural History, Florida Museum of Natural History, Global Biodiversity Information Facility, Harvard University Museum of Comparative Zoology, Hoopa Valley Tribe, Idaho Department of Environmental Quality, Idaho Department of Fish and Game, Illinois Natural History Survey, inaturalist.org, Interagency Special Status Sensitive Species Program, US Forest Service and US Bureau of Land Management, King County, Kitsap County, Montana Natural Heritage Program, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Museum of the North, University of Alaska, National Park Service, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, NatureServe, Nez Perce Tribe, North Carolina State Museum of Natural Sciences, Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, Oregon State Arthropod Collection, Oregon State University, Orma J. Smith Museum of Natural History, College of Idaho, Pacific Northwest Native Freshwater Workgroup, Pierce County, Presidio Trust, Puget Sound Stream Benthos online database, Redwood National and State Parks, Royal British Columbia Museum, Salt Spring Island Conservancy, Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Skagit Fisheries Enhancement Group, Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History, Snohomish County, Snoqualmie Indian Tribe, Sonoma County Water Agency, Spring Rivers Ecological Sciences, Stanford University, Tahoe Resource Conservation District, The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, The California Environmental Data Exchange Network (CEDEN), The Division of Molluscs, Museum of Biological Diversity, The Ohio State University, Thurston County, Trinity River Restoration Program, Tuolumne Aquatic Resources Relational Inventory (TARRI), Turlock Irrigation District / Don Pedro Recreation Agency, University of Alaska, University of Alaska Museum, University of Alberta, University of Arizona, University of British Columbia, Okanagan, University of California, Santa Barbara, University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology, University of Texas at El Paso, US Bureau of Land Management, US Department of Energy, US Fish and Wildlife Service, US Forest Service, US Geological Survey and the BISON database, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources Native Aquatics Program, Utah Museum of Natural History, Utah State University, Utah State University/U.S. Bureau of Land Management BugLab, Washington Department of Ecology, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wild Fish Conservancy, Willamette Riverkeeper, Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Yale Peabody Museum, and Yurok Tribe.

Peer-reviewed literature and unpublished reports:

Arizona Game and Fish Department. 2001. Anodonta californiensis. Unpublished abstract compiled and edited by the Heritage Data Management System, Arizona Game and Fish Department, Phoenix, AZ. 5 pp.

Baily, J.L. Jr., and R.I. Baily. 1951. Further observations on the Mollusca of the Relict Lakes in the Great Basin. The Nautilus 63(2): 46-53.

Beetle, D. E. 1989. Checklist of the recent Mollusca of Wyoming, USA. The Great Basin Naturalist 49(4): 637-645.

Beetle, D.E. 1957. The Mollusca of Teton County, Wyoming. The Nautilus 71(1): 12-22.

Bensen, K. 2010. 2005-2009 Summary of western pearlshell freshwater mussel monitoring in Mill Creek and 2009 Inventory in Redwood Creek. Redwood National and State Parks, Orick, CA.

Bequaert, Joseph C. and Walter B. Miller. 1973. The Mollusks of the Arid Southwest with an Arizona Check List. The University of Arizona Press.

BioAnalysts, Inc. 2006. Aquatic macroinvertebrate inventory and RTE assessment. Wells Hydroelectric Project. FERC No. 2149. Prepared for Public Utility District No. 1 of Douglas County, East Wenatchee, WA.

Black, B.A., J.B. Dunham, B.W. Blundon, J. Brim Box, A.J. Tepley. 2015. Long-term growth-increment chronologies reveal diverse influences of climate forcing on freshwater and forest biota in the Pacific Northwest. Global change biology 21:594–604.

Bonnot, Paul. 1951. The fresh-water mussels of California. California Fish and Game. 37(4): 485-487.

Bowersox, R. J. 2003. Salinity tolerance of the freshwater mussel Anodonta dejecta Lewis in holocene Lake Cahuilla, southeastern California: A caution in the use of fossil freshwater mussels as a freshwater indicator in stable isotope studies. Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs, vol. 35, no. 6, p. 212.

Branson, B.A. 1977. Freshwater and terrestrial Mollusca of the Olympic Peninsula, Washington. The Veliger 19(3): 310-330.

Branson, B.A. and R.M. Branson. 1984. Distributional records for terrestrial and freshwater Mollusca of the Cascade and coastal ranges, Oregon. The Veliger 26(4): 248-257.

Butkus, S. 2015. Assessment of shell beneficial use in the Russian River watershed. North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board.

Button, F.L. 1900. Unionidae in a tunnel. The Nautilus 13(11): 130.

Canadian Biodiversity Information Facility. 2005. [web resource]. Available: http://www.cbif.gc.ca/portal/digir-searcht.php (accessed 10 October 2005).

Carlton, H.P. 1870. Shells of Antioch, California and vicinity. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 4: 50-52.

Carlton, H.P. 1870. Shells of Truckee River and vicinity. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 4: 57-58.

Carpenter, P.P. 1856. Monograph of the shells collected by T. Nuttall, Esq., on the California coast, in the years 1834-1835. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 24: 209-229.

Chamberlin, R.V. and D.T. Jones. 1929. A descriptive catalog of the Mollusca of Utah. Bulletin of the University of Utah 1(1): 1-203.

Cheney, M.A., J. Liu, A. Amei, X. Zhao, S.W. Joo, and S. Qian. 2009. A comparative study on the uptake of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons by Anodonta californiensis. Environmental Pollution 157: 601-608.

Chong, J.P., J.C. Brim Box, J.K. Howard, D. Wolf, T.L. Myers, K.E. Mock. 2008. Three deeply divided lineages of the freshwater mussel genus Anodonta in western North America. Conservation Genetics 9:1303-1309.

Clarke, A.H. 1973. The Freshwater Molluscs of the Canadian Interior Basin. Malacologia 13(1-2):1–509.

Colfax, Yvonne. Yakama Nation, mussel proposal.

Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. 2003. Assessment and status report on the Rocky Mountain ridged mussel Gonidea angulata in Canada. Ottawa, Canada.

Coney, C.C. 1993. Freshwater Mollusca of the Los Angeles River: past and present status and distribution. In The Biota of the Los Angeles River: an overview of the historical and present plant and animal life of the Los Angeles River drainage. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. K.L. Garrett. Pp. C1-C25.

Cooper, J.G. 1870. On shells of the west slope of North America. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 4: 149-154.

Cooper, J.G. 1890. Fresh-water Mollusca of San Francisco County. Zoe 1(7): 196-197.

Culleton, B.J. 2006. Implications of a freshwater radiocarbon reservoir correction for the timing of the late Holocene settlement of the Elk Hills, Kern County, California. Journal of Archaeological Science 33: 1331-1339.

Culver, M., Robert Fitak, and Terry Myers. 2012. California Floater Genetics. Arizona Game and Fish Department Heritage Grant I09010.

Cvancara, A. M. 2005. Illustrated Key to Wyoming’s Freshwater Mussels.

D’Eliscu, P.N. 1972. Observation of the glochidium, metamorphosis, and juvenile of Anodonta californiensis Lea, 1857. The Veliger 15(1): 57-58.

Dall, W.H. 1908. Notes on Gonidea angulata Lea, a freshwater bivalve, with description of a new variety. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 4(4): 499-500. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC

Davis, E. 2008. Freshwater mussel abundance, distribution, and habitat preference in two northern California rivers within Karuk ancestral territory. Thesis. Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA.

Davis, E. A., A. T. David, K. M. Norgaard, T. H. Parker, K. McKay, C. Tennant, T. Soto, K. Rowe, and R. Reed. 2013. Distribution and abundance of freshwater mussels in the mid Klamath Subbasin, California. Northwest Science 87(3): 189-206.

Davis, L.G. and K. Muehlenbachs. 2001. A late Pleistocene to Holocene record of precipitation reflected in Margaritifera falcata shell 18O from three archaeological sites in the Lower Salmon River Canyon, Idaho. Journal of Archaeological Science 28: 291-303.

De Laguna, F. 1947. The prehistory of northern North America as seen from
the Yukon. Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology 3. Menasha, WI: Society of American Archeology. [Reprinted 1980. New York: AMS Press.]

Deixis MolluscDB database. 2009. An unpublished collection of mollusk records maintained by Ed Johannes.

DeMartini, J.D. 2005. The papershell clam, Anodonta californiensis. Redwood Science Project, Humboldt State University.

Dipeso, C.C. 1953. The Sobapuri Indians of the Upper San Pedro River Valley, Southwestern Arizona. The Amerind Foundation 7. Dragoon, Arizona.

ENTRIX, Inc. 2007. Draft freshwater mussel report for Sunset Stables Restoration and Resource Management Plan Project. Sacramento, CA. 24 pp.

Eyerdam, W.J. 1934. Land and freshwater snails from the vicinity of Yakima, Washington. The Nautilus XLVIII: 46-48.

Fevold, K. and J. Vanderhoof. 2002. Freshwater mussels found in Bear and Cottage Lake Creeks during habitat assessments in 2001. In conjunction with the Sammamish-Washington Assessment and Modeling Program.

French, L. 2005. Electronic database containing Gonidea angulata survey results from the Okanagan basin.

Frest, T. J. 1999. A review of the land and freshwater mollusks of Idaho. Prepared for the Idaho Conservation Data Center. Seattle, WA. 281 pp. plus appendices. Lower Salmon River Populations still persist in the St. Joe and St. Marie system, the Little S

Frest, T. J., and E. Johannes. 1991. Mollusc fauna in the vicinity of three proposed hydroelectric projects on the middle Snake River, central Idaho. Final report submitted to Don Chapman Associates, Inc., Boise, ID. Deixis Consultants, Seattle, WA. 60 p.

Frest, T.J. and E.J. Johannes. 1995. Freshwater Molluscs of the Upper Sacramento System, California. State of California Department of Fish and Game Annual Report. Deixis Consultants, Seattle, WA.

Frest, T.J. and Johannes, E.J. 1997. Upper Sacramento System Freshwater Mollusk Monitoring, California: with particular reference to the Cantara Spill, Cantara Trustee Council, 1996 Yearly Report. Deixis Consultants, Seattle, WA.

Frest, T.J., and E.J. Johannes. 2000. An annotated checklist of Idaho land and freshwater mollusks. Journal of the Idaho Academy of Science 36:1–51.

Gould, A.A. 1850. Descriptions of new species of shells. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History 3(19): 292-296.

Gustafson, R.G. and E.M. Iwamoto. 2005. A DNA-based identification key to Pacific Northwest freshwater mussel glochidia: Importance to salmonid and mussel conservation. Northwest Science 79(4): 233-245.

Haas, F. 1954. Non-marine mollusks from the Pacific slope of North America. The Nautilus 67(3): 94-96.

Hannibal. H. 1912. The aquatic mollusks of southern California and adjacent regions, a transition fauna. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences 11(1):18-46.

Harman, Willard N. 1970. Notes. The Nautilus 83(3): 112-115.

Hastie, L.C. and K.A. Toy. 2008. Changes in density, age structure and age-specific mortality in two western pearlshell (Margaritifera falcata) populations in Washington (1995-2006). Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 18: 671-678.

Heard, W.H. 1975. Sexuality and other aspects of reproduction in Anodonta (Pelecypoda: Unionidae). Malacologia 15(1): 81-103.

Helmstetler, H. 2006. Population structure and pollutant levels of freshwater mussels in the mid-Columbia River. Masters thesis, Walla Walla College, Walla Walla, WA.

Helmstetler, H. and D.L. Cowles. 2008. Population characteristics of native freshwater mussels in the mid-Columbia and Clearwater Rivers, Washington state. Northwest Science 82(3): 211-221.

Hemphill, H. 1891. A collector’s notes on variation in shells, with some new varieties. Zoe 1(11): 321-337.

Henderson, J. 1907. The Mollusca of Colorado. University of Colorado Studies 4(2): 77-96.

Henderson, J. 1929. Non-marine mollusca of Oregon and Washington. University of Colorado Studies 17(2): 47-191.

Henderson, J. 1931. The problem of the mollusca of Bear Lake and Utah Lake, Idaho-Utah. The Nautilus 44(4): 109-113.

Henderson, J. 1935. Margaritifera and Fluminicola in Wyoming. The Nautilus 48(3): 107.

Henderson, J. 1936. Mollusca of Colorado, Utah, Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming-supplement. University of Colorado Studies 23(2): 81-145.

Henderson, J. 1936. The non-marine Mollusca of Oregon and Washington a supplement. University of Colorado Studies 23(4): 251-280.

Herrmann, S.J. and Fajt, J.R. 1985. Additional Colorado records of Anodonta grandis grandis Say (Bivalvia: Unionidae). The Nautilus 99:107–109.

Hogle, C. In prep. Genetic and demographic structure of three western pearlshell (Margaritifera falcata) populations in the western Great Basin, USA.

Hovingh, P. 2004. Intermountain freshwater mollusks, USA (Margaritifera, Anodonta, Gonidea, Valvata, Ferrissia): geography, conservation, and fish management implications. Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist 2: 109-135.

Howard, J. 2010. Sensitive Freshwater Mussel Surveys in the Pacific Southwest Region: Assessment of Conservation Status. Prepared for: USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Region, Regional Office.

Howard, J. 2013. Upper Truckee Airport Reach freshwater mussel (Margaritifera falcata) relocation: two years later. Unpublished report.

Howard, J.K. and K.M. Cuffey. 2003. Freshwater mussels in a California North Coast Range river: occurrence, distribution, and controls. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 22: 63-77.

Huckleberry, G., T.W. Stafford, J.C. Chatters. 1998. Preliminary geoarchaeological studies at Columbia Park, Kennewick, Washington, USA. Army Corps of Engineers.

Ingersoll, E. 1877. On a collection of mollusks from Utah and Colorado. Davenport Academy of Natural Sciences 2: 130-134.

Ingram, W.M. 1948. The larger freshwater clams of California, Oregon, and Washington. Journal of Entomology and Zoology 40(4): 72-92.

Ingram, W.M. and K.W. Kenyon. 1947. Anodonta and its associated mollusks from Stoe Lake, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California. The Nautilus 61(2): 51-53.

Jones, D.T. 1940. Recent Collections of Utah Mollusca, with Extralimital Records from Certain Utah Cabinets. The Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, 1908-1980: fall meetings, Utah State University Logan, Utah. 17: 33-45.

Joseph, D.S. Fishcamp. 1997. Maverick Publications, Bend, OR

Karna, D.W., and R.E. Millemann. 1978. Glochidiosis of salmonid fishes. III. Comparative susceptibility to natural infection with Margaritifera margaritifera (Pelecypoda: Margaritanidae) and associated histopathology. The Journal of Parasitology 64(3): 528-537.

Keep, J. 1935. West coast shells, revised by Joshua L. Baily, Jr. Stanford, Univ. Press, 350 p.

Koenig, S. 2000. Relation of physical factors to the behavior and distribution of the freshwater mussel, Margaritifera falcata (Gould). Masters thesis, Western Washington University, WA.

Landye, J.J. 1981. Current status of endangered, threatened, and/or rare mollusks of New Mexico and Arizona. Office of Rare and Endangered Species (USDOI and USFWS), Albuquerque, NM. 35 pp.

Lea I. 1838. Description of New Freshwater and Land Shells. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 6:1–154.

Lea, I. 1852. Descriptions of new species of the family Unionidæ [New fresh water and land shells]. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 10:253–294.

Lea, I. 1856. Description of new freshwater shells from California. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 8(2): 80-81.

Lea, I. 1860. Descriptions of seven new species of Unionidae from the United States. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 12: 306-307.

Lea, I. 1863. Description of ten new species of Unionidae of the United States. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 168-169.

Lee, J. 2000. The distribution and ecology of the freshwater molluscs of northern British Columbia. Masters thesis. University of Northern British Columbia, Canada.

Lee, J. and J.D. Ackerman. 1998. British Columbia freshwater molluscs held at the Royal British Museum listed by location.

Lewis, J. 1875. Description of a New Species of Anodonta. Field and Forest 1:26–27.

Lippincott, K. and L.B. Davis. 2000. A prehistoric freshwater mussel collection from the Schmitt Chert Mine Site (24BW599) near Three Forks, Montana. Central Plains Archaeology 8: 131-142.

Lohse, E.S. 1993. Southeastern Idaho Native American Prehistory and History. Manual for Archaeological Analysis: Field and Laboratory Analysis Procedures. No. 92-1. Idaho Museum of Natural History, Pocatello, ID.

Lysne, S.J. and B.R. Krouse. 2011. Margaritifera falcata in Idaho: using museum collections and GIS to demonstrate a declining trend in regional distribution. Journal of the Idaho Academy of Science 47(2): 33-39.

Lysne, S.J. and B.R. Krouse. 2012. The conservation status of Margaritifera falcata: using GIS to demonstrate the decline of a freshwater mussel in Idaho. Technical report submitted to Idaho Department of Fish and Game, Lewiston, ID. 38 pp.

Maret, T.R., D.E. MacCoy, K.D. Skinner, S.E. Moore, and I. O’Dell. 2001. Evaluation of macroinvertebrate assemblages in Idaho rivers using multimetric and multivariate techniques, 1996-98. Water Resources Investigations Report 01-4145. US Geological Survey.

Martel, A. L., and J.-S. Lauzon-Guay. 2005. Distribution and density of glochidia of the freshwater mussel Anodonta kennerlyi on fish hosts in lakes of the temperate rain forest of Vancouver Island. Canadian journal of zoology 83:419–431.

Masse, B. 1985. The Peppersauce Wash Project: excavations at three multicomponent sites in the Lower San Pedro Valley, Arizona. Arizona State Museum Contributions to Highway Salvage in Arizona No. 53. Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.

May, C. L., and B. S. Pryor. 2015. Explaining Spatial Patterns of Mussel Beds in a Northern California River: The Role of Flood Disturbance and Spawning Salmon. River research and applications. Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rra.2894.

Mertie, J. B., Jr., 1937, The Yukon-Tanana region, Alaska: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 872, 276 p.

Metcalf-Smith, J. and B. Cudmore-Vokey. 2004. National general status assessment of freshwater mussels. National Water Research Institute / NWRI Contribution No. 04-027. Environment Canada.

Meyers, T.R. and R.E. Millemann. 1977. Glochidiosis of salmonid fishes. 1. Comparative susceptibility to experimental infection with Margaritifera margaritifera (Pelecypoda: Margaritanidae). The Journal of Parasitology 63(4): 728-733.

Mock, K.E., J.C. Brim Box, J.P. Chong, J.K. Howard, D.A. Nez, D. Wolf, and R. S. Gardner. 2010. Genetic structuring in the freshwater mussel Anodonta corresponds with major hydrologic basins in the western United States. Molecular Ecology.

Moore, A. and L. Machial. 2007. Freshwater mussel surveys (target species Gonidea angulata) in the Okanagan and Kootenay regions, summer 2007. B.C. Conservation Corps Invertebrates at Risk Crew (Department Ministry).

Morlan, R.E. 1980. Taphonomy and Archaeology in the Upper Pleistocene of the Northern Yukon Territory: A Glimpse of the Peopling of the New World. National Museum of Man (Mercury Series), Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper No. 94. 380

Mueller, R. P., B. L. Tiller, M. D. Bleich, G. K. Turner, and I. D. Welch. 2011. Assessment of the species composition, densities, and distribution of native freshwater mussels along the Benton County shoreline of the Hanford Reach, Columbia River, 2004. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA.

Murphy. 1942. Relationship of the fresh-water mussel to trout in the Truckee River. California Division of Fish and Game 28(2): 89-102.

Myers, T. L. 2009. Pre-historical, Historical, and Recent Distribution of Freshwater Mussels (Unionidae: Anodonta) in the Colorado River and Río Yaqui Basins (with notes on Guzmán Basin, Río Sonoyta, Río Asunción/Magdalena, and Rio Grande). Arizona Game and Fish Department Heritage Grant Project # I07011.

Myers, T.L. 2005. Site records of Anodonta californiensis (including references to A. dejecta and A. mearnsiana) in the Colorado River basin, Guzman Basin, and upper Rio Yaqui basin. Unpublished data.

Neitzel, D. A., and T. J. Frest. 1993. Survey of Columbia River Basin streams for Columbia pebblesnail Fluminicola columbiana and shortface lanx Fisherola nuttalli. PNL-8229, Rev. 1. Prepared for the U. S. Department of Energy.

New Mexico Game and Fish. 2002. Biota Information System of New Mexico, BISON. California floater, Anodonta californiensis. Accessed December 18, 2003, from http://fwie.fw.vt.edu/states/nmex_main/species/060037.htm

Oliver, G.V. and W.R. Bosworth III. 1999. Rare, imperiled, and recently extinct or extirpated mollusks of Utah; a literature review. Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.

Orcutt. C. 1890. The Colorado Desert. Annual Report of the State Minerologist:899–919.

Pacific Gas and Electric Company. 2008. Survey for special status aquatic molluscs and invasive crayfish within project reservoirs and project-affected streams. Technical Memorandum 69 (TM-69). McCloud-Pit Project, FERC Project No. 2106.

Placer County Water Agency. 2009. Middle Fork American River Project. FERC No. 2079. Draft. AQ3 Aquatic Mollusk Technical Study Report. Auburn, CA.

Public Utility District No. 1 of Okanogan County (PUD, Washington). 2007. Enloe Hydroelectric Project Draft License Application. FERC Project# 12569. Exhibit E – Environmental Report. Subpart E.3 Fish, Wildlife, and Botanical Resources

Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County. 2015. Sunset Fish Passage and Energy Project FERC Project No. 14295 Compilation Study Report (CSR).

Rainey, F. (1939). Archaeology in central Alaska. American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers 36, 351–405.

Richards, D. C. 2014. Freshwater Mollusk Survey, Jordan River, UT, Part 1: Unionid Mussels and Non-Pulmonate Snails. Final Report, version 2.1, November 5, 2014. Prepared for: Central Valley Water Reclamation Facility and Central Davis Sewer District.

Richards, D.C., C.M. Falter, G. T. Lester, R. Myers. 2005. Responses to FERC Additional Information Request AR-2. Listed Mollusks. Hells Canyon Project FERC No. P-1971-079. Idaho Power Company.

Rodeck, H.G. 1935. Unusual concentration of Lymnaea. The Nautilus XLVIII: 106-107.

Roscoe, E.J and S. Redelings. 1964. The ecology of the freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera margaritifera. Sterkiana 16: 19-32.

Roscoe, E.J. 1967. Ethnomalacology and paleoecology of the Round Butte archaeological sites, Deschutes River Basin, Oregon. Bulletin 6: 3-20. Museum of Natural History, University of Oregon.

Russell, R. and R. B. Brunson. 1967. A Check-List of Mollusks of Glacier National Park, Montana. Sterkiana 26: 1-5.

Schone, B.R., N.A. Page, D.L. Rodland, J. Fiebig, S. Baier, S.O. Helama, W. Oschmann. 2006. ENSO-couple precipitation records (1959-2004) based on shells of freshwater bivalve mollusks (Margaritifera falcata) from British Columbia. International Journal of Earth Science 96: 525-540.

Scordino, J.J., P.J. Gearin, S.D. Riemer, and E.M. Iwamoto. 2016. River Otter (Lontra canadensis) Food Habits in a Washington Coast Watershed: Implications for a Threatened Species. Northwestern Naturalist 97:36–47.

Shinkwin, A., 1979. Dakah De’nin’s Village and the Dixthada Site: A Contribution to Northern Athapaskan Prehistory. In: National Museum of Man Mercury Series, Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper 91. National Museums of Canada, Ottawa.

Shopalov, L. and A.C. Taft. 1954. The Life Histories of the Steelhead Rainbow Trout (Salmo gairdneri gairdneri) and Silver Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) With Special Reference to Waddell Creek, California, and Recommendations Regarding Their Management. California Department of Fish and Game Fish Bulletin 98.

Short, Z.F., R.F. Palumbo, P.R. Olson, and J.R. Donaldson. 1969. The Uptake of I^(131) by the Biota of Fern Lake, Washington, in a Laboratory and a Field Experiment. Ecology 50:979–989.

Simpson, C.T. 1893. A new Anodonta. The Nautilus 6:134–135.

Smith, A.G. 1943. Mollusks of the Clearwater Mountains, Idaho. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 23: 537-554.

Smith, S.C., N. Foster, and T. Gotthardt. 2005. The distribution of the freshwater mussels Anodonta spp. and Margaritifera falcata in Alaska. Final Report. Alaska Natural Heritage Program.

Southern California Edison. 2010. Draft Native Aquatic Species Management Plan: 2010 Data Collection Report, Big Creek No. 4 Hydroelectric Project. FERC Project No. 2017. Southern California Edison Company.

Spring Rivers. 2007. Reproductive timing of freshwater mussels and potential impacts of pulsed flows on reproductive success. California Energy Commission, PIER Energy-Related Environmental Research Program. CEC-500-2007-097.

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