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American Currents Archives1972 Vol 0 No 1Pg 3. Rainbow in Miniature. By Anthony Benages Pg 4. The Culture and Breeding of Jordanella flordae. By Wesley E. Smith Pg 7. Meet the Bluespotted Sunfish. By Robert T. Rosen Pg 13. Northen Pike - Esox lucius. By John Bondhus Pg 18. Meet the Dashing Dace. By Tony Terciera Pg 21. New Friends - Darters and Sculpins. By Mary Hill Pg 23. Amateur Collectors Personified. By Harry E. Abrams, Jr. 1973 Vol 1 No 1 Pg 5. Transplanting of Stickleback. By Emily Winward Pg 7. Anquilia. By Robert T. Rosen Pg 10. Mating Dance of the Bluntnose Dace. By Ray Katula Pg 13. Catfish and Bullheads. By John Bondhus Pg 22. The Sole Survivor. By Ray Katula 1973 Vol 1 No 2 Pg 6. Native Fishes for the Home Aqaurium. By Dan Fowler Pg 7. Displaced Fishes. By Ted Christensen Pg 9. Fishes from Our Own County. By Walter Lannoy Brand Pg 19. Water Lilies. By Roger D. Burroughs 1973 Vol 1 No 3 Pg 4. If They're Good Enough for Sterba, They're Good Enough for Me! By Pete Mosse Pg 6. Maintaining Micropterus salmoides in Home Aquaria. By George Barnes Pg 12. Do Fish Drink? By Dan Kosta Pg 13. The Effect of Stream Aging on the Succession of Fishes in the Embarras River in Champaign County, Illinois. By Donald G. Buth Pg 22. Spawning Deviations in Notropis lutrensis. By Frank G. Pagoria Pg 24. "Ligula" - A Freshwater Parasitic Tapeworm. By George Barnes Pg 30. The Flagfin Minnow, Notropis signipinnis. By Dick Stober Pg 31. Oodinium pillularis. By John J. Fraboni Pg 36. Delmarva Dip-netting. By Raymond Coombs Pg 41. Forage Fish an Important Link. By Dick Stober 1973 Vol 1 No 4 Pg 1. Blue-spotted Sunfish (Part II). By Robert T. Rosen Pg 3. Native Sunfish and Bass in Aquariums. By John Bondhus Pg 10. Nevada's Unique Fish. By Emily Winward Pg 11.The Natives are Friendly. By Dave Ernst Pg 16.Brook Stickleback - Eucalia inconstans (Kirtland). By Roger D. Burroughs Pg 19.Rainwater Killifish Lucania parva (Baird and Girard 1854). By Dick Stober 1974 Vol 2 No 1 Pg 3. Black-banded Sunfish Enneacanthus chaetodon. Pg 7. Native Fish in Science. By Mark Gottlob Pg 9. Argulus: The Carp Louse. By John Fraboni Pg 18. Ictalurid Catfishes of the United States. By Kenneth Relyea 1974 Vol 2 No 2 Pg 3. The Brown Bullhead, Ictalurus nebulosus. By Martin Zybura Pg 4. The Native Flying Fish. By Ray Katula Pg 5. Introduction to North America's Natives. By Dick Stober Pg 13. Collecting in Tidal Bays. By Robert Rosen 1974 Vol 2 No 3 Pg 4. The Rainwater Killifish. By Robert J. Goldstein Pg 7. Hummingbird Fish. By Wayne Babberl Pg 9. Collecting Guidelines. By Bill Scoggins Pg 17. Long Trip Fish Hauler. By Gio Fedon 1974 Vol 2 No 4 Pg 3. The Grass Pickerl...Esox americanus vermiculatus. By Jim Pitts Pg 6. Notes on Enneacanthus obesus x E. gloriosus Hybrid. By Robert T. Rosen Pg 7. A Native Fish Community Tank. By Vern Parish Pg 23.Notes on Chemicals Used by Aquarists. By Robert T. Rosen 1975 Vol 3 No 1 Pg 3. Notropis welaka. By A. Tercera Pg 5. Live Foods Only; Truth or a Myth. By Dan Kosta Pg 7. The Red Horse Minnow Notropis lutrensis (Baird and Girard, 1853). By James Cokendolpher Pg 9. An Outline of the Genus Cyprinodon. by Estella Flather Pg 16. The Satinfin Shiner. By Teddy Schubert Pg 19. Locating Fish Literature Resources. By John Bondhus 1975 Vol 3 No 2 Pg 3. The Sailfin Minnow Notropis hypselopterus. By Dick Stober Pg 5. Distribution of Fishes. By John Bondhus Pg 7. Enneacanthus Chaetodon: Food Requirements in Captivity. By Robert T. Rosen Pg 10. Pet Shop Natives, or How to Avoid Going Swimming with your Clothes on. By Dan Kosta Pg 15. Reference Collections for the Native Fishes Student. By Jim Pitts Pg 18. A Review of Methods to Control Ichthyophthiriasis. By D. G. Cross 1975 Vol 3 No 3 Pg 3. The Tadpole Shrimp. By Joseph Boucher Pg 10. Have you got Planaria? By Chuck Eschbach Pg 12. The Naked Goby. By Robert T. Rosen Pg 13. How about Barnacles? By Charles Keller, Jr. Pg 15. Getting a Start on Fish Identification. By Jim Pitts 1975 Vol 3 No 4 and 5 Pg 2. Shiners. By Dick Stober Pg 4. Coldwater Aquascape. By Linda J. Krebs Pg 6. Fish Behavior. By Allan Semett Pg 7. Daphnia. By Dick Stober 1975 Vol 3 No 6 Pg 2. Spawning of the Rainbow Darter. By John Beaulieu Pg 3. Reelin' 'Em in at Reelfoot. By H. Ross Brock, Jr. Pg 9. Ha! Ha! I Cheated. By Joseph C. Mann Jr. 1976 Vol 4 No 1 Pg 7. Fundulus notatus and F. olivaceous: Two American Topminnows. By Michael Patterson Pg 10. Relationship between Aquatic Plants and Reproduction of Fishes. Pg 17. North American Fishes in the United Kingdom. By Vernon B. Hunt Pg 20. A Rare Darter Spawning. By Alan M. Fletcher Pg 23. Killifish from Outer Space. By Glen E. Collier 1976 Vol 4 No 2 Pg 4. Notes on the Banded Sculpin, Cottus carolinae, in Kentucky. By Jim Pitts Pg 9. The Stickleback: The White Rat of the Aquarium. By Mark Gottlob Pg 10. Growth Inhibiting Substance. By Bob Sparks Pg 13. G.I.S. - G.P.S. - Optimum Crowding a Possible Synthesis? By Harry Abrams 1976 Vol 4 No 3 Pg 4. Newts. By Mark Gottlob Pg 8. Whitenose Notropis???? By Dick Stober Pg 10. The Amazing Grunion. By Jerome D. Spratt 1976 Vol 4 No 4 Pg 1. Dwarfs of Devil's Hole. By K. L. Boynton 1976 Vol 4 No 5 Pg 1. A Preliminary Inventory of the Fishes of Wildcat Slough. By Donald G. Buth and John E. Brezina 1976 Vol 4 No 6 Pg 2. The Iowa Darter Etheostoma exile Girard. By Frederick A. Copes Pg 11. The Leon Springs Pupfish...a Resurrection Story. By Braz Walker Pg 15. Those Creepy Crawly Things can be Fun. By Ken Goldsmith Pg 20. By the Bluenose Obsessed. By Dick Stober Pg 22. Spawning Johnny Darter Etheostoma nigrum. By Donald Buth Pg 24. Skin Flukes of Pet Fish. By Charles Dale Meryman 1977 Vol 5 No 1 Pg 6. Quick! Over there!! or Collecting Killies in the Wilds of East Texas. By Estella Flather Pg 11. The Flagfin Minnow, Notropis signipinnis. By Dick Stober Pg 13. Profiting from a Trashy Tank. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 22. On the Origin and Evolution of Castostomid Fishes - A Literature Review. By Harold H. Gray 1977 Vol 5 No 2 Pg 4. Diamonds in the Rough. By H. Ross Brock Pg 6. Notropis spolopterus (Cope). By Ted Pobud Pg 8. Who Me?? I don't Need to Keep Notes. By Charles Dale Meryman Pg 10. The Fish Doctor Makes Pond Calls. By Panky Glamsch 1977 Vol 5 No 3 Pg 5. Bluefin Killy. By Dale Weber Pg 7. Swamping through Georgia and Florida. By Ross Brock Pg 13.Culture of Stonefly Nymphs (Isoperla confusa) as a Live Food. By Joseph Boucher Pg 15. Maximal Egg Number in Pimephales notatus Nests. By Donald G. Buth and Charles R. Peterson Pg 17. Jellyfish of the Sierra Foothills. By Mary Bacon 1977 Vol 5 No 4 Pg 8. Marine Nebalia bipes as Live Food. By Joseph Boucher Pg 10. Notes on Abortive Spawnings of Pirate Perch, Aphredoderus sayanus, with Comments on Sexual Distinctions. By John S. Brill Jr. 1978 Vol 6 No 1 Pg 4. Introduction to the Darters. By Robert J. Goldstein Pg 6. Cyprinodon elegans (Cyprinodontidae). By James Cokendolpher Pg 12. Opossum Shrimps as Live Fish Food. By Joseph Boucher 1978 Vol 6 No 2 Pg 1. Pygmy Sunfishes. By H. Ross Brock Pg 5. Fairy Shrimps as Live Food. By Joseph Boucher Pg 9. Seining without a Partner: How to Make the Task Easier. By Jim Pitts 1978 Vol 6 No 3 Pg 5. Notropis venustus I: Gentle Giant. By Michael A. Patterson Pg 8. The Bantam Sunfish (Lepomis symmetricus. By Mike Stegall Pg 7. Water Louse (Asellus aquaticus) as Live Food. By Joseph Boucher Pg 10. Astyanax fasciatus mexicanus in the Aquaria and in the Wild. By James C. Cokendolpher 1978 Vol 6 No 4 Pg 4. Welaka! By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 5. Notropis venustus II: A Chance Observation of Breeding Habits. By Michael A. Patterson Pg 9. Practical Considerations for Collecting. By John S. Brill Jr. 1979 Vol 7 No 1 Pg 3. Carl Leavitt Hubbs 1894-1979. By Dr. Martin R. Brittan Pg 5. Color Change in the Olympic Mudminnow. By Tom Baugh Pg 7. Food Preference of the Olympic Mudminnow (Novumbra hubbsi). By Tom Baugh Pg 9. Native Killifishes. By Alfred D. Castro 1980 Vol 7 No 2 Pg 4. Our Disappearing Desert Fishes. By David L. Soltz Pg 13. A Spawning of Etheostoma nigrum. By Nancy Garcia Pg 16. The Behavior of Fishes. By Antonios Pappantoniou Pg 18. Ecological Zonation in the Aquarium. By William R. Kenney Pg 22. Collecting Fishes in an Urban Environment. By Jim Pitts Pg 26. Conservation and Native Fishes: Rare or Endangered Fishes of Canada. By D. E. McAllister 1980 Vol 7 No 3 Pg 4. The Tessealated Darter. By Robert E. Schmidt Pg 8. Pumpkinseed Spawning. By Bill McLarney Pg 11. The Lost Treasure of the Aztecs. By James K. Langhammer Pg 14. The Red-tailed Goodeid. By Ed Parker Pg 16. The Fishes of Spartanburg, South Carolina. By Bob Goldstein Pg 19. The Behavior of North American Freshwater Fishes: II. The Behavior of Catfishes. By Antonios Pappantoniou Pg 21. Fish Feeding. By Midge Hill 1980 Vol 7 No 4 Pg 3. The Marine Aqaurium. By Gerald C. Corcoran Pg 9. Fishes of Southeastern Massachusetts. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 12. How Old is that Fish? By Dave Ramczyk and Tim Morefield Pg 17. Blood Feeders - the Leeches. By Charles O. Masters 1981 Vol 7 No 5 Pg 3. A Marine Killifish Community. By Harry W. Faustmann Pg 7. Report on a Collection of Sticklebacs from Maine. By Bob Goldstein Pg 11. A History of the Cold Spring Harbor Fish Hatchery. By Norman Soule Pg 15. Observations on the Courtship and Reproduction of Desert Pupfish, Cyprinodon macularius. By Tom Baugh Pg 19. The Creek Chubsucker, Erimyzon oblongus. By Harold H. Gray Pg 29. Native Aquarium Plants: Cabomba caroliniana. By Jim DeBernardo 1982 Vol 7 No 6 Pg 2. Life on a Stream Bottom. By E. Laurence Perkins Pg 10. Thermal Relationships in Native Aquarium Fish. By William R. Kenney Pg 16. The Longnose Dace, Rhinichthys cataractae in Wisconsin and Wyoming Waters. By Dr. Robert R. Miller Pg 27. Native Aquarium Plants: Didiplis diandra. By Robert A. Gasser 1982 Vol 7 No 7 Pg 8. Native Fish: Thoughts of a Naturalist. By Tom Baugh Pg 14. Spawning the Eastern Mudminnow (Umbra Pygmaea). By John Eccleston Pg 17. The Lyre Goby (Evorthodus lyricus). By Bob Goldstein Pg 21. Rabida - the Mad Ones. By William R. Kenney 1982 Vol 8 No 1 Pg 11. A Fish Community in a Thermal Discharge. By William R. Kenney Pg 15. The American Mini. By Joanne Brockstael Pg 17. Swamp Killie (Leptolucania ommata). By Bruce Gebhardt 1982 Vol 8 No 2 Pg 6. Color Variations in Wild Mollies. By Linn Blanchard Pg 9. The Creek Chubsucker(Erimyzon oblongus): A Belated Letter to the Editor. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 10. The Mottled Sculpin (Cottus bairdii). By Luther Brown Pg 13. Technique for Photographing Small Fish. By Tom Baugh Pg 16. Observation on Aquarium Maintenance of the Skilletfish, Gobiesox strumosus By C. A. E. Bergesen Pg 20. Through a Glass, Brightly. By Bruce Gebhardt 1982 Vol 8 No 3 Pg 6. Wild Sailfin Mollies (Poecilia latipinnis) , Part II. By Linn Blanchard Pg 9. Spawning the Fathead Minnow (or, the Joy and Disappointment of an English NANFA Member). By Derek Jones Pg 11. Summary of Recent Scientific Articles on Darters. By Robert E. Schmidt Pg 12. Collecting in the South. By Andrew P. Borgia Pg 13. Spawning Crenichthys nevadae. By Tom Baugh Pg 18. Native Crayfish? Bah, Humbug! By Donna Magee Pg 19. Setting up a Native Fish and Plant Collecting Trip. By Robert J. Goldstein 1982 Vol 8 No 4 Pg 6. The Rainbow Darter (Etheostoma caeruleum) (Too bad it's Canadian!). By John Beaulieu Pg 8. Field Notes on the Sheepshead Minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus). By Linn Blanchard Pg 11. More on Madtoms. By William R. Kenney 1983 Vol 9 No 1 Pg 1. Index to Native-fish Articles Publised in the Popular Literature, 1946 - 1981. Compiled by Daniel and Nancy Thompson 1983 Vol 9 No 3 Pg 10. An Aquascape for North American Stream-Dwellers. By William R. Kenney Pg 14. An Introduction to Enneacanthus obesus (Girard), the Banded Sunfish (with a Special Reference to Rhode Island Distribution). By Lee Finley 1983 Vol 9 No 4 Pg 7. Microscopy of Larval Fish, By John Eccleston Pg 9. Confession: "Enneacanthus obesus" spawning was crossing of E. obesus male, E. gloriosus female. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 13. The Swamp Darter. By Robert E. Schmidt 1983 Vol 9 No 5 Pg 5. Spawning the Logperch - A Native Canadian Darter. By Joanne Bockstael Pg 9. Canadian Laws on the Import and Export of Ornamental Fishes. By Joanne Bockstael Pg 11. Native Aquarium-fish Species of Canada. By Dave Knelson 1983 Vol 9 No 7 Pg 12. Freshwater Catfishes of New England. By Lee Finley Pg 15. Along the Jersey Coast - Fresh, Soft, Acid, Hard, Alkaline, and Brackish. By Bruce Gebhardt 1983 Vol 9 No 8 Pg 7. The Gettysburg Campaign. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 13. I Still Want a Lolypop. By Dennis Coskren, Chuck & Shirley Hawks, and Fred & Betsy Robinson 1984 Vol 10 No 1 Pg 13. Whitesbog. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 19. Fish-collecting Records on a Home Computer. By Konrad Schmidt 1984 Vol 10 No 2 Pg 14. Night Collections. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 18. The Sole Survivor: Spawning the Bowfin! By Ray Katula 1984 Vol 10 No 3 Pg 8. Texas-size Ecotics. By Dan Thompson Pg 11. Little Fishes of Kansas, Part I. By Ken Brunson 1984 Vol 10 No 5 Pg 6. Spawning the Pumpkinseed Sunfish (Lepomis gibbosus). By Joanne Bockstael Pg 11. The New Lacey Act. By Robert Thomas Pg 15. Little Fishes of Kansas, Part II. By Ken Brunson 1984 Vol 10 No 6 Pg 11. The New England Aquarium. By John Eccleston Pg 14. Dipping for Darters. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 16. Bluefin Killifish. By D. Weber Pg 18. Index to Native Fish Articles Published in the Popular Literature: 1982 and 1983 Update, with Errata to 1946 - 1981 Index, and Index and Indexing of AKA Literature, 1962-1970. By Daniel J. Thompson 1984 Vol 10 No 7 Pg 6. Okefenokee Revisited. By Dick Stober Pg 9. The Commuting Collector (or, the Collector Commuter): Philadelphia's Wissahickon Creek. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 11. The Redbellied Dace and Their Allies: Four Phoxinus Snapshots. By Edward Cope, Ken Brunson, and Valdimir Constantinescu Pg 14. Field Notes on Pupfish Habitats in Death Valley, Ash Meadows, and Southern Amargosa River Basin 5/31-6/4/83, Part I. By Arch C. Martin 1984 Vol 10 No 8 Pg 7. A Report on Collecting Fish near Rockport, Texas March 1-9, 1984. By Hal Fairfield Pg 9. Dismal Trip. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 11. For the Love of Gar! By Tom Fulton 1984 Vol 10 No 9 Pg 5. Who's Aftraid of Spiders? Collecting in the Niagara River. By Peter J. Mang Pg 7. Report on a Collection of Fishes from Franklin County, North Carolina. By Bob Goldstein Pg 9. Gambusia affinis. By Walter Knoblock 1984 Vol 10 No 10 Pg 7. Fishes of the Mukwonago River, Wisconsin. By Thomas P. Simon Pg 12. Glassworms: A Native Food for Native Fish. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 15. Field Notes on Pupfish Habitats in Death Valley, Ash Meadows, and Southern Amargosa River Basin 5/31-6/4/83, Part II. By Arch C. Martin 1985 Vol 11 No 1 Pg 11. San Lorenzo River Report. By Hal Fairfield Pg 12. The Hudson River Larval Fish Project. By Robert E. Schmidt Pg 13. Keeping Silversides Alive: I. Tips on Collection and Handling of Silversides. By JR Shute. II. Care and Keeping of Silversides. By Sue Ann Slotterback. III. Collecting and Keeping the Brook Silverside. By David L. Hall Pg 17. Meshoppen Trip: Collecting in Northeastern Pennsylvania. By Bruce Gebhardt 1985 Vol 11 No 2 Pg 8. Collecting with a Minnow Trap - No Fuss, No Muss. By Peter J. Warny Pg 10. Collecting and Spawning the Least Brook Lamprey Lampetra aepyptra, (Abbott 1860). By John Brill 1985 Vol 11 No 3 Pg 9. Snorkeling for Natives. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 12. Fish Watching in the Little Tennesee. By Bill McLarney 1985 Vol 11 No 4 Pg 9. Raising Whiteworms. By Mary Harris Pg 10. Southern Natives in a Community Tank. By Hal E. Armes Pg 13. Fishes that Crossbreed in Missouri. By David L. Hall Pg 14. Photgraphing Fish. By Konrad Schmidt 1985 Vol 11 No 5 Pg 7. Collecting in Missouri - Part I: the Osage System. By David L. Hall Pg 9. Notes on the Tadpole Madtom in Minnesota and Wisconsin. By Phillip A. Cochran Pg 12. Have you ever tried Grindal Worms? By Henry W. Faustmann Pg 14. Going Collecting on Horseback. By John Ben Williams Pg 14. Observing the Blackspot Shiner (Notropis atrocaudalis) in a 29-gallon Aquarium. By John Ben Williams 1985 Vol 11 No 6 Pg 9. The Creek Chub. By Vernon B. Hunt Pg 11. Return to Keck's Creek, Arkansas. By Paul Ribitzki Pg 14. Three Tributaries of the Northwestern Chesapeake. By Bruce Gebhardt 1985 Vol 11 No 7 Pg 6. Snorkeling in the Ocala National Forest of Northern Florida. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 8. Collecting in East Texas. By John Ben Williams Pg 10. Breeding Habits of Tesselated, Rainbow, and Swamp Darters. By W. P. Sear Pg 13. An Aquarium Spawning of Rainbow Darters. By Robert Thomas 1985 Vol 11 No 8 Pg 4. The Blacknose Dace (Rhinichthys atratulus). By Vernon B. Hunt Pg 7. Darter Hybrids for Home Aquaria. By Clark Hubbs Pg 11. A Checklist of Conasauga River Fishes, Tennessee. By Thomas P. Simon 1985 Vol 11 No 9 Pg 9. The Natives are Making me Restless. By Bob McDonnell Pg 10. Breeding Fundulus heteroclitus. By Hal Fairfield Pg 13. Carp Eggs: An "Exotic" Fish Food. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 15. Mud Creek in Upstate New York. By Michael Lucas 1986 Vol 12 No 1 Pg 4. Flat Land, Fast Water. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 6. Spawning the Blackbanded Sunfish. By James G. Sternburg Pg 8. Some Ontario Cyprinids. By Mark Klym Pg 10. Collecting in the Allegheny River System of Northwestern Pennsylvania. By Peter J. Mang Pg 12. Collecting French Creek in Northwestern Pennsylvania. By William Estes 1986 Vol 12 No 2 Pg 4. More Non-natives Proposed by State Fisheries Experts! By Mark Klym Pg 11. The Tule Perch from Central California - a Livebearer. By Alfred D. Castro 1986 Vol 12 No 3 Pg 4. Catching Marine Fish while Snorkeling. By Bill Ballard Pg 6. Notropis ardens By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 10. Colorado's Two Native Killifish - Fundulus zebrinus kansae and F. sciadius. By Mike Wilson Pg 12. Collecting Fundulus in Colorado. By Edd Kray 1986 Vol 12 No 4 Pg 9. Renting a Car for Collecting. By Bruce Gebhardt 1986 Vol 12 No 5 Pg 4. Fish-watching in Yellowstone Park. By David L. Hall Pg 6. Backyard Ponds. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 8. Tesselated Darter Observations. By Michael J. Shrom Pg 10. What about the other Mudminnow? The European Dogfish (Umbra kremeri). By Veron B. Hunt Pg 12. Minnow Traps: A Native-fish Collector's Best Friend. By John Ben Williams 1986 Vol 12 No 6 Pg 7. Some Goodeid Species for the Aquarium. By James K. Langhammer Pg 11. Elassoma evergladei. By Roger Przybysz Pg 12. Mesogonistius chaetodon: An Account of its Breeding and other Habits. By W. P. Sear 1986 Vol 12 No 7 Pg 7. Missouri Madness. By Michael J. Lucas Pg 12. Creating a Stream Aquarium. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 14. An Essay on the Value of Collecting or how to Tell if your Collecting Trip was more than just Fun. By Robert E. Schmidt Pg 15. Fundulus cingulatus. By Bob McDonnell 1986 Vol 12 No 8 Pg 7. Aquarium Spawning and Rearing of the Southern Redbelly Dace. By James G. Sternburg Pg 10. Bleeding and Duskystripe Shiners (Notropis zonatus and N. pilsbryi). By David L. Hall Pg 12. By the Bluenose Obsessed. By Richard Stober Pg 14. The Bait Store Collector. By Konrad Schmidt 1986 Vol 12 No 9 Pg 10. ...But no Redfins. By David L. Hall Pg 12. Fishes of the Lower Susquehanna (and Tributaries of the Northern Chesapeake, Part I. By William Estes and Bruce Gebhardt 1986 Vol 12 No 10 Pg 5. Aquarium Spawning of the Northern Redbelly Dace and Finescale Dace with Hybrids of these Species. By Kathryn Goddard Pg 10. Notes on the Spawning of Three Lamprey Species. By Henry W. Fowler Pg 12. Notes on Keeping Colors in Darters. By Stephen Argento 1987 Vol 13 No 1 Pg 6. Ice-water Sunnies. By Michael Lucas Pg 8. Observations on Spawning of Banded Pygmy Sunfish. By Rodney Harper Pg 10. Roaches!!! By David L. Hall Pg 12. The Diamond Killifish (Adinia xenica). By Bob McDonnell 1987 Vol 13 No 2 Pg 4. Northern Redbelly Dace in Wisconsin. By Ray Katula Pg 6. Fundulus confluentus. By Bill Ballard Pg 9. Return to the Ocala National Forest. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 14. The Blue Shiner in Alabama. By Bruce Gebhardt 1987 Vol 13 No 3 Pg 4. Habitats of some Killifish of southern Alabama and Vicinity. By Bill Ballard Pg 13. Fishes of the Lower Susquehana (and Tributaries of Northern Chesapeake), Part II. By William Estes and Bruch Gebhardt 1987 Vol 13 No 4 Pg 10. Unexpected Spawing of Speckled Dace. By Valerie Burston Pg 11. Spawning of Fundulus chrysotus. By Rodey Harper Pg 13. Fringe Benefits. By Richard C. Stober Pg 16. Two Economical Food Sources. By Doug Carpenter 1987 Vol 13 No 5 Pg 16. Fishes of the Lower Susquehana (and Tributaries of Northern Chesapeake), Part III. By William Estes and Bruch Gebhardt Pg 20. Crossbreeding of River Darter and Blackside Darter (Percina Shumardi and P. maculata). By Ray Katula Pg 23. The Sheepshead Minnow. By Scott Webster Pg 25. The Adventures of Three Fish-collectors in Northwest Florida and South Alabama. By Bill Ballard Pg 29. Spawning Gila orcutti. By Ella Pittman 1988 Vol 14 No 1 Pg 11. Fundulus similis. By William Ballard Pg 13. Search for a Rare Hudson River Fish. By Robert E. Schmidt Pg 15. Ceriodaphnia - A Newly Discovered Live Food. By Nancy Garcia Pg 19. Fishes of the Lower Susquehanna and Northern Chesapeake Tributaries, Part III. By William Estes and Bruce Gebhardt 1988 Vol 14 No 2 Pg 8. Boyd Creek, Upstate New York. By Michael J. Lucas Pg 11. Touchet River Expedition in Southeastern Washington State. By Martin Ulstein Pg 13. Spawning the Sharptail Goby (Gobionellus hastatus). By Rodney Harper 1988 Vol 14 No 3 Pg 7. Probable Spawning of Bantam Sunfish (Lenomis symmetricus.) By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 9. Breeding Lucania goodei: Guaranteed. By Rodney Harper Pg 10. The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly Sculpins. By Ray Katula Pg 15. The Mystery of the Golden Pupfish. By Bruce J. Turner Pg 20. Craig Creek, Virginia. By Brian K. Wagner Pg 25. Fishes of the Lower Susquehanna and Northern Chesapeake Tributaries, Part IV. By William Estes and Bruce Gebhardt Pg 32. Float Trip Collecting. By Konrad Schmidt 1988 Vol 14 No 4 Pg 8. Why the Fountain Darter Stayed Endangered. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 10. Easy Collection of Mealworms. By Anthony C. Berry Pg 12. "New Frontiers" - A Year of Collecting in Kentucky. By Doug Carpenter Pg 18. Orangefin Darter. By Ray Katula Pg 22. The Phenology of Colonial Creek. By Konrad Schmidt 1988 Vol 14 No 5 Pg 11. Schooling Behavior of the Chiselmouth (Acrocheilus alutaceus). By Martin Ulstein and Del Blackburn Pg 12. Rediscoverying Plains Topminnow in Minnesota. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 13. Desert Fishes Council. By Alan M. McCready Pg 19. Fishes of the Lower Susquehanna and Northern Chesapeake Tributaries, Part V. By William Estes Pg 23. Grand Island, Grand Time. By Michael J. Lucas Pg 25. Blennies: Easy-to-keep Marine Fishes. By. Mary K. Wicksten Pg 26. Mint Chocolate Chip Darters? By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 28. Mail Order Collecting Gear. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 33. Crayfish for the Native-fish Aquarium. By Jessica Williams 1989 Vol 15 No 1 Pg 12. Nest-building Minnows. By Carol E. Johnston Pg 14. Salt Ponds of Key West, Florida. By Andrew Borgia Pg 16. Footwear for Collectors. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 20. Perhaps you should Seek Professional Help. By Konrad Schmidt 1990 Vol 16 No 2 Pg 17. Killifish in Oregon? By Ray Katula Pg 18. Spawning of Three Cavity-nesting Fishes in a Culvert. By Phil A. Cochran and John D. Lyons Pg 21. Notes on Spawning of the Johnny Darter. By Ray Katula Pg 23.Fishes of the Hudson River. By Tom Lake 1990 Vol 16 No 3 Pg 10. Collecting in the Twilight Zone. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 13. Spawning of the Reticulate Sculpin. By Ray Katula Pg 16. Fish-watching at Hunter's Spring. By David Arbour Pg 18. Fishes of the Lower Susquehanna and Nothern Chesapeake Tributaries, Part VII. By William Estes and Bruce Gebhardt 1991 Vol 17 No 1 Pg 24. Spawning the Pirate Perch, One More Time. By Ray Katula. Pg 27. Elephants' Graveyard. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 29. Spawning Spotfins. By Michael J. Lucas 1991 Vol 17 No 2 Pg 15. Observations of Spawning Methods of the Creole Darter and the Finescale Saddled Darter (Etheostoma colletti and E. osburni). By Ray Katula Pg 17. The Preserved Reference Collecton. By Andrew P. Borgia Pg 19. Killer Kick Nets. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 22.Rudd Menace. By Bruce Gebhardt 1991 Vol 17 No 3 Pg 12. Why do I Collect. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 14. Greetings from an Olympic Swamp. By Joe Middleton Pg 18. Spawning of the Green Sunfish, Lepomis cyanellus. By Matthew D. Sorensen Pg 20. Fishes of the Lower Susquehanna and Nothern Chesapeake Tributaries, Part VIII - the Suckers. By William Estes and Bruce Gebhardt Pg 25. Aquarium Spawning of the Mountain Redbelly Dace. By James G. Sternburg 1991 Vol 17 No 4 Pg 13. Recollecting Collecting in South Jersey's Pinelands. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 17. Breeding Behavior of the Flagfish (Jordnaella floridae). By David Arbour Pg 18. A Spawning the Orangespotted Sunfish (Lepomis humilis). By Matthew Sorensen Pg 21. Maintaining the River Carpsucker (Carpiodes carpio) in the Aquarium. By David Arbour Pg 22. Lake Superior's "Inferior" Fishes. By Konrad Schmidt 1992 Vol 18 No 1 Pg 25. Introduction to Native Fish and NANFA. By Gerald C. Corcoran Pg 32. The Northwestern Percopsis, the Sand Roller. By Ray Katula 1992 Vol 18 No 2 Pg 10. A "Fish Walk"? By Parke H. John, Jr. Pg 12. Fiery and Fireproof: Spawning of Common Shiners, Luxilus cornutus. By Bruce Gebhardt Pg 16. The One-person Seine. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 21.The Live Fish Collection at the Aquarium of the Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Mexico. By Carlos Agulera Pg 24. You're in the Main Stream. By Joe Pell 1992 Vol 18 No 3 Pg 17. Three Springs in Central Florida. By David Arbour Pg 22. Three Darters found in Minnesota Rivers. By Doris Sarslow 1993 Vol 19 No 1 Pg 16. Behavior of Fundulus chrysotus and Fundulus olivaceous in a Captive Environment. By Rodney W. Harper Pg 19. Spawning of Southern and Northern Redbelly Dace Compared. By James G. Sternburg Pg 22. Spawning-rocks for Cyprinids. By Ray Katula Pg 29. Fishes of the Lower Susequehanna (and Northern Chesapeake Tributaries), Part IX. By William Estes 1993 Vol 19 No 2 Pg 20. Spawning a "Winged Minnow" - the Broadstripe Shiner. By Ray Katula Pg 22. Putting Back the Pieces. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 27. Pine Barrens - Double Trouble. By Ken Beja Pg 29. A Trip to the Creeks of the San Ramon Valley, California. By William A. Sears Pg 31. Spawning Behavior of the Central Stoneroller (Campostoma anomalum,). By Jon Wojtowicz 1993 Vol 19 No 3 Pg 11. Laboratory Bluegill Culture. By Mark Rosenqvist Pg 13. Minnesota River Fish Tales. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 17. Desert Trip. By Michael Florez Pg 22. The Most Endangered Fish in Nevada: the White River Spinedace (Lepidomeda albivallis). By Larry Newman Pg 26. Fishes of the Lower Susequehanna and Northern Chesapeake Tributaries, Part X. By William Estes and Bruce Gebhardt 1993 Vol 19 No 4 Pg 11. Fish Videos. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 13. Powerhead Toms. By Doug Carpenter Pg 15. Breeding the Tesselated Darter. By Pete McKendrick Pg 23. The Maine State Aquarist Society's Native Species Awareness Project. By Daniel P. Dumas 1994 Vol 20 No 1 Pg 13. Reflections on the June 12, 1993 NANFA Convention. By Fred Batzer Pg 14. Deep-south, Deep-freeze Killies. By B. G. Granier Pg 18. Mother Nature didn't get it Right the First Time. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 22. Eulogy for the San Joaquin River. By Ray Katula 1994 Vol 20 No 2 Pg 18. Big Fruit Flies. By Jim Pitcairn Pg 19. The Making of a 125-Gallon Native-Fish Aquarium Display. By Robert Carrilio Pg 21. Successfully Spawning and Rearing the Green Sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus). By Peter R. Rollo Pg 26. The Mystery Cave Expeditions. By Konrad Schmidt 1994 Vol 20 No 3 Pg 16. A Checklist of the Fishes of Benton County, Oregon. By Daniel J. Logan Pg 19. Crimson Tide, Neon Lights: Notropis chrosomus. by B.G. Granier Pg 22. Breeding the Tesselated Darter. By Joe Hanyok Pg 25. The Sacramento Perch (Archoplites interruptus) - California's Only Native Centrarchid. By Will Sears Pg 28. Lake Lily, Cape May County, New Jersey. By Joe Yanik 1994 Vol 20 No 4 Pg 23. What in the World is a Pirapatinga. By Daniel J. Logan Pg 26. Golden Shiners (Notemigonus crysoluecas) Utilizing Bowfin (Amia calva) Nest as Spawning Site. By Ray Katula Pg 30. Successfully Spawning and Raising the Blackbanded Sunfish (Enneacanthus chaetodon). By Peter R. Rollo 1995 Vol 21 No 1 Pg 26. Successfully Spawning the Banded Sunfish (Enneacanthus obesus). By Peter R. Rollo Pg 30. Collecting in Ponds in Clackamas County, Oregon. By Daniel J. Logan 1995 Vol 21 No 2 Pg 5. Underwater Photography in Kansas. By Garold W. Sneegas Pg 8. Aquarium Care and Maintenance. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 10. Proposed NANFA Endangered Species Conservation Program. By John Bondhus Pg 18. The Central Longear (Lepomis magalotis) as an Aquarium Species. By Robert Rice 1995 Vol 21 No 3 Pg 2. Fish Community Changes in the Illinois River, 1962-1994. By Thomas V. Lerczak Pg 7. Our Hidden Jewels. By Robert Rice Pg 9. Adverse Assessments of Gambusia affinis. By Henry R. Rupp Pg 15. Elassoma evergladei Hard To Find But Easy To Maintain and Spawn. By Peter R. Rollo Pg 19. Collecting in Yamhill County,Oregon. By Daniel J. Logan 1996 Vol 22 No 1 Pg 1. Natural Resources and Envirormental Overview of The Ravenna Army Ammunition Plant With Thoughts On The Future. By Tim Morgan Pg 22. Preparing for a collecting trip. By Daniel J. Logan 1996 Vol 22 No 2 Pg 2. Fish Communities of Minnesota National Wildlife Refuges. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 10. The North American Killies. By Robert Rice Pg 12. Putting Back the Pisces. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 16. Darters: Aquarium Designs and Care Guidelines. By Ray Katula Pg 19. The Aquarist as a Naturalist. By Robert Rice Pg 21. Minnow Trap Bait. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 24. Collecting in Little Bennett Regional Park, MD: Montgomery County's Gem. By Robert Bock 1996 Vol 22 No 3 Pg 6. Overlooked Orangethroats. By Robert Rice Pg 7. Keeping the Broadstripe Topminnow. By B. G. Granier Pg 10. Bowfin Basics. By R. W. Wolff Pg 12. Is the Blue Catfish in Minnesota? By Konrad Schmidt Pg 13. Meet the Bluespotted Sunfish. By Robert T. Rosen Pg 14. The Miser's Guide to Fishkeeping. By Robert Rice Pg 15. Field Trip to Railroad Valley, Nevada. By James E. Lawson and Peter Unmack Pg 19. Surf, Turf, and Eggs. By Paul C. Sikkel Pg 23. A Native Fish Primer: Livebearers, Killifish, and Minnows. By Dave Williamson Pg 30. The Tail End: Gregarius Gators. By Konrad Schmidt 1997 Vol 23 No 1 Pg 4. Rare Fishes of North Carolina (Part One). By Fred C. Rohde and Rudolf G. Arndt Pg 14. Beneath the Waters of Balmorhea State Park. By Garold W. Sneegas Pg 17. Collecting Exotic Asian Freshwater Shrimp in Oregon. By Dan Logan and Pat McDonald Pg 20. Centrarchid Observations. By Robert Bock Pg 29. NANFA '96 National Meeting Report. By Warren H. Lund, Jr. Pg 35. "The Tail End" The Carp's Last Laugh. By Konrad Schmidt 1997 Vol 23 No 2 Pg 1. Setting up a Riffle Tank. By Cliff Zoller Pg 11. Iowa Army Ammunition Plant, Middletown, Iowa: 1994 Stream Survey Results. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 17. Arizona/ Nevada Regional Report: Spring 1997. By Peter J. Unmack Pg 21. Keeping the Dwarf Crayfish, Cambarellus shufeldtii. By Bruce Scott Pg 23. Shipping Fishes 101. By Robert Rice Pg 35. "The Tail End" Robot - Reared Swans. By Konrad Schmidt 1997 Vol 23 No 4 Pg 1. A Brief Trip to the Olympic Peninsula. By Jay DeLong Pg 9. Dexter National Fish Hatchery and Technology Center. By Linda Andreasen and Buddy Jensen Pg 11. Putting Native Fishes in Their Best Light. By Robert S. Carillio Pg 13. Fathead Fundamentals. By Robert Bock Pg 15. NANFA’s Regional Chapters Open the Door to Increased Activity. By Elmer A. Guerri Pg 18. Minnesota’s Forgotten Fish. By Tom Dickson Pg 23. Transporting Fishes. By B. G. Granier Pg 39. “ The Tail End ” Painful Pastimes. By Konrad Schmidt 1998 Vol 24 No 1 Pg 1. Reproductive Behavior, Embryology, and Larval Development of Four Species of Pygmy Sunfish. By Maurice F. Mettee and Christopher Scharpf Pg 11. In Search of the Mangrove Killie, Rivulus marmoratus. By Andrew Borgia Pg 12. Spawning the Marsh Killifish, Fundulus confluentus. By B.G. Granier Pg 13. The Resurrection of Fox Den Lake. By Robert Rice Pg 16. Tropical Fish Collecting, Rhode Island Style. By Michael Borgia Pg 19. The Joy of Bait Shops. By Elmer A. Guerri Pg 21. The Introduction of Exotic Species in the Great Lakes. By Leah Parosky 1998 Vol 24 No 2 Pg 1. Collecting in Tennessee: A NANFA Primer. By Mike Whitfield Pg 6. Additional Records of Fishes from Fort Pond Bay on Long Island, New York. By Clarence R. Hickey, Jr. and James W. Lester Pg 15. The Bluenose Shiner, the Jewel of the Southeast. By B.G. Granier Pg 17. The Native Pond. By Jeffrey A. Fullerton Pg 19. Nongame Fish Identification Workshop: A Potential Regional Chapter Activity. By Elmer A. Guerri 1998 Vol 24 No 3 Pg 1. Rare Fishes of North Carolina (Part Two). By Fred C. (Fritz) Rohde and Rudolf G. Arndt Pg 5. Collecting the Marine Invertebrates of Oregon’s Rocky Intertidal Areas. By Joe Middleton Pg 7. Creating a Native Stream Biotope Aquarium. By Michael Thennet Pg 9. Keeping Gamefish. By Robert Bock Pg 11. Parasites from Threespine Sticklebacks in Oregon. By Daniel J. Logan Pg 13. Native Killifishes: Cyprinodon from New Mexico. By Kenneth L. McKeighen, Jr. Pg 15. A Spring Conservation Trip to Nevada. By Peter Unmack Pg 17. Cliff Zoller’s Brine Shrimp Hatchery. By Tom Gooch Pg 19. Collecting and the Spatial Habits of Three Native Killies. By Jeffrey A. Fullerton 1998 Vol 24 No 4 Pg 1. Collecting, Spawning, and Raising the Orangefin Darter, Etheostoma bellum. By Clifford Zoller Pg 4. So Many Fishes, So Little Time: A Report from the 1998 NANFA Annual Meeting in Chattanooga. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 13. Striking Gold: The Eastern Starhead Topminnow, Fundulus escambiae. By Jeffrey A. Fullerton Pg 39. The Smallest Fish in North America, Heterandria formosa. By Hy Finkelstein 1999 Vol 25 No 1 Pg 1. Ten Fantastic Fishes from Minnesota. By by Tom Dickson Pg 15. Keeping and Spawning the Golden Ear Topminnow, Fundulus chrysotus. By B.G. Granier Pg 16. Spotfin Chub Success. By Chris Coco and Sue Goodwin Pg 19. Virginia Science Museum Showcases State’s Underwater Life. By Michael Thennet Pg 21. An Aravaipa Adventure. By Bill Edwards Pg 35. Surprisingly Hardy Silversides. By David L. Hall 1999 Vol 25 No 2 Pg 1. Good Lampreys Are Hard to Find. By Neal D. Mundahl Pg 9. The Continuous Flow Aquarium. By Patrick T. Johnson Pg 13. Algal Turf Scrubber™ Technology Comes of Age for Freshwater Aquariums. By Elmer A. Guerri Pg 17. Baby Swamp Fishes: How to Raise Them. By R.W. Wolff Pg 19. Beginning a Planted Aquarium. By Shireen Gonzaga 1999 Vol 25 No 3 Pg 1. Fishes of the Mackinaw and Vermilion River Systems in Illinois. By Michael E. Retzer Pg 13. Seine Advice for Collecting Killies. By Bruce J. Turner Pg 15. A Long-Term Algal Turf Scrubber™ Freshwater Native Fishes Biome. By Elmer A. Guerri Pg 18. The Link Between Growth and Otolith Size in Young-of-the-Year Lepomis Sunfish. By Bruce Stallsmith and William Hagar Pg 22. Dollar Sunfish: Spawning Two Varieties of Lepomis marginatus. By R.W. Wolff 1999 Vol 25 No 4 Pg 1. Juvenile Pallid Sturgeon in Laboratory Aquaria. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover, K. Jack Killgore, and S. Reid Adams Pg 9. Fooling Fish With Light. By Cliff Zoller Pg 12. Spawning the Banded Topminnow, Fundulus cingulatus. By David M. Schleser Pg 23. The Great NANFA Loach Hunt of 1999. By Jay DeLong Pg 39. Desert Springs Action Committee Moapa Spring 1999 Trip Report. By Wright Huntley 2000 Vol 26 No 1 Pg 1. Walking in 100-Year-Old Footsteps in Southern Oregon. By Jay DeLong Pg 13. Backyard Billabongs. By Michael Thennet Pg 15. Leaving Your Non-Fish Life Behind for Three Days: The 1999 NANFA National Convention in Champaign-Urbana. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 35. Native Fishes at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. By Nick Zarlinga 2000 Vol 26 No 2 Pg 1. Horned Serpents, Leaf Dogs and Spoonbill Cats: 500 Years of Paddlefish Ponderings in North America. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover, K. Jack Killgore, and Steven G. George Pg 11. Spawning and Raising the Greenside Darter, Etheostoma blennioides, with a Note on the Eggs of the Rainbow Darter, E. caeruleum. By Bob Muller Pg 13. Coastal Plain Collecting. By Jeffrey A. Fullerton Pg 17. How I Ship Fish. By Cliff Zoller Pg 35. Arkansas River Shiner Takes Road Trip to Recovery. By Craig Springer 2000 Vol 26 No 3 Pg 1. Imperiled Fishes in Mississippi. By Stephen T. Ross and William T. Slack Pg 6. Politics, Science, and the Fate of the Alabama Sturgeon. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 17. Collecting and Maintaining the Mud Sunfish, Acantharchus pomotis. By John Brill Pg 22. New Localities for the Tadpole Madtom (Noturus gyrinus) in Northeastern Wisconsin. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 39. Tishomingo National Fish Hatchery Gets Alligator Gar. By Craig Springer 2000 Vol 26 No 4 Pg 1. British Columbia’s Lake Lamprey, Rare and Little Known. By Loucas Raptis Pg 4. Marvelous Milfoils and the Miracle of Barley Straw. By Jeffrey A. Fullerton Pg 7. The Spotfin Shiner (Cyprinella spiloptera): A Fish that Spawns in Trees. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 9. In Maryland Survey, Stream Dwellers Decide What’s Healthy. By Karl Blankenship Pg 16. Gar Gettin’. By Elmer A. Guerri Pg 19. The Mystery of the Feeder Fish, or Who is Rosy Red? By Bob Muller Pg 21. Our Native Freshwater Mussels. By Thomas Hayes Pg 23. What’s in a Name?... The Olympic Mudminnow. By Mike Kelly Pg 35. Rounding Up Razorbacks. By Craig Springer 2001 Vol 27 No 1 Pg 1. Fishes from the Land of Trucha de Tierra Caliente. By John Lyons Pg 9. Building the Perfect Gar Pond. By R. W. Wolff Pg 11. NANFA’s Hottest Convention Ever: Three Fish-Filled Days in Jackson, Mississippi. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 19. Spawning the Rare Pygmy Madtom, Noturus stanauli. By J. R. Shute Pg 22. Corrections and Updates to American Aquarium Fishes. By Robert J. Goldstein Pg 27. A Native Fish and Riparian Zone Interpretive and Educational Sign Project. By Rob Carillio Pg 39. NANFA Illinois-Indiana Chapter Enjoys Fantastic Fall Outing. By Elmer A. Guerri 2001 Vol 27 No 2 Pg 1. The Smallest-Mouth Buffalo. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover and K. Jack Killgore Pg 5. A Species on the Edge: Occurrence of Pimephales vigilax (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) in the Spring River Drainage, Missouri. By Robert A. Hrabik Pg 11. Search for the Fabled Mountain Nymph. By Michael Thennet and Dave Jones Pg 13. Observations on the Unique Reproductive Behavior of Fundulus lima Vaillant, a Killifish from Baja California. By John Brill Pg 22. How Do Your Redbellies Spawn? By Bob Muller 2001 Vol 27 No 3 Pg 1. Artificial Propagation of Loach Minnow, Rhinichthys cobitis. By Robert E. David and Lawrence J. Wirtanen Pg 14. Where the Killifish Aren’t: A Pictorial Essay on How the Growth of Downtown Huntsville, Alabama, Destroyed the Habitat of the Now-Extinct Whiteline Topminnow, Fundulus albolineatus. By Bruce Stallsmith Pg 19. Habitat Improvement and Native Fish Loss: The Upper Verde River Fish Mystery. By Shireen Gonzaga Pg 23. Raising Dusky Darters. By Bob Muller 2001 Vol 27 No 4 Pg 1. Keeping the Brook Trout in a Home or Classroom Aquarium. By Mark A. Smith Pg 8. Farmers vs. Fish: The Battle of the Rio Grande Silvery Minnow. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 13. The Rio Grande Silvery Minnow Recovery Effort at the Albuquerque Biological Park. By Holly Casman Pg 15. Captive Propagation of Chubs of the Genus Erimystax. By J.R. Shute and Patrick L. Rakes Pg 17. Federal Hatchery Develops Technology for Imperiled Bonytail Chub. By Craig Springer Pg 21. Introducing the NANFA Breeders Award Program (BAP) 2002 Vol 28 No 1 Pg 1. Pools: Construction and Maintenance. By Ken McKeighen, Jr. Pg 7. Catching and Keeping Redfin Pickerel. By Jon Andrews Pg 9. The Fascinating Fishes of Cape Fear. By Fred C. (Fritz) Rohde Pg 11. Something for Everybody: A Report from the 2001 NANFA Convention in Hocking Hills, Ohio. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 21. Killifishes of Nantucket. By Bruce Stallsmith Pg 23. What NANFA Means to Me. By Rob Carillio, Jeffrey A. Fullerton and Michael Thennet 2002 Vol 28 No 2 Pg 1. Growth, Condition, and Color of Juvenile Bowfin in Medium-Sized Aquaria. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover and Tyler Strange Pg 7. Audubon Shot Birds, I Keep Fish: Exploring the Naturalist-Aquarist Connection. By Rob Denkhaus Pg 9. Captive Propagation of Two Pupfishes, Cyprinodon nevadensis armagosae and Cyprinodon fontinalis. By Ken McKeighen, Jr. Pg 13. Birthplace of the Eels: A Biological Detective Story. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 15. Spawning of Three Nothonotus Darter Species. By Ray Katula Pg 21. Feeding the North American Paddlefish, a Filter Feeder, in a Large Multi-Taxa Exhibit. By Nick Zarlinga Pg 35. Why Keep Natives? By Robert Bock 2002 Vol 28 No 3 Pg 1. Snorkeling Michigan Inland Lakes. By Nancy S. Washburne Pg 10. Where Bowfin Lurk: Unnatural Habitations from 1875 to the Present. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover, K. Jack Killgore, and Steven G. George Pg 17. Iowa and Least Darters: Their Spawning and Rearing Compared. By Bob Muller Pg 19. Teens Promoting Native Fish Awareness Through Research and Teaching. By Chad Hallyburton Pg 21. A Little History, a Lot of Fish: Field Trip to Cedar Creek, Lebanon Church, Virginia. By Bruce Hahn and Michael Thennet Pg 23. Discovering Desert Fishes: A Family Affair. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 35. A Fragile Jewel, the Blackbanded Sunfish. By Robert Bock 2002 Vol 28 No 4 Pg 1. NANFA: Its Past and Future. By John Bondhus Pg 10. New Species of Freshwater Sculpins from the Middle Atlantic Eastern United States. By Brian Margolis Pg 11. Developing Propagation and Culture Protocols for the Cahaba Shiner, Notropis cahabae, and the Goldline Darter, Percina aurolineata. By Patrick L. Rakes and J. R. Shute Pg 19. Tennessee River Gorge Seinerama 2002, or the Land of Slippery Footing. By Steven A. Ellis Pg 23. Collecting and Spawning the Flagfin Shiner. By Bob Muller Pg 25. The First Texas Native Fish Weekend. By Rob Denkhaus Pg 38. Auction Ameca Collecting. By Robert Bock 2003 Vol 29 No 1 Pg 1. Extreme Catfishes. By Garold W. Sneegas and Dean A. Hendrickson Pg 3. Design and Application of a Larval Fish Trap. By K. Jack Killgore Pg 5. Lake Superior’s Native Lampreys. By Sharon Moen Pg 8. Underwater Video Monitoring of Four Desert Fishes at an Arizona High School. By Kevin Kehl Pg 9. Propagation of the Pirate Perch, Aphredoderus sayanus, an Extirpated Fish in Ohio, at The Toledo Zoo. By Jay Hemdal Pg 10. Great Lakes, Great People, Great Memories: A Report from the 2002 NANFA Convention in Ann Arbor, Michigan. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 21. Current Status of the Bridle Shiner, Notropis bifrenatus. By Brian Margolis Pg 25. Of Cormorants and Killies. By John R. Quinn Pg 35. Beware the Green Sunfish. By Robert Bock 2003 Vol 29 No 2 Pg 1. Herrings and Shads of North America: Diversity, Natural History, Conservation, and Aquarium Care. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 17. Building the Perfect Gar Pond II: The Gar River. By R.W. Wolff Pg 20. Gila Trout Swim Back From Extinction. By Craig Springer Pg 23. National Water (and Fish) Monitoring Day 2002. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 35. The Least Amount of Trouble. By Robert Bock 2003 Vol 29 No 3 Pg 1. Where Have All the Shiners Gone? By Rob Criswell Pg 5. The Mexican Blindcat (Prietella phreatophila): Research and Exploration in the Groundwater. By Jean K. Krejca Pg 12. The Fishes of Traders Creek in Northwestern Oklahoma. By David L. McNeely and William Caire Pg 19. Spawning the Okefenokee Pygmy Sunfish (Elassoma okefenokee). By Philip Kukulski Pg 21. Darters and Bass Get a Pass. By Craig Springer Pg 22. The Crested Goby (Lophogobius cyprinoids): an “Underwater Hound” from Florida. By Spike Millevolte Pg 35. Bringing ’em Back Alive. By Robert Bock 2003 Vol 29 No 4 Pg 1. The Lonely Longnose Sucker. By Rob Griswell Pg 4. Okefenokee II: The Return. By Steven A. Ellis and Chip Rinehart Pg 10. Notes on Spawning the Swamp Darter Etheostoma fusiforme. By Bob Muller Pg 11. Seining Downstream and Other Tips. By Peter J. Unmack Pg 13. Have Snorkel, Will Travel. By Casper Cox Pg 20. Cryptic Biodiversity. By Robert S. Butler and Richard L. Mayden Pg 35. The Best Kept Secret in the Bait Shop. By Robert Bock 2004 Vol 30 No 1 Pg 1. Finship and Fun: A Report from the 2003 NANFA Convention in Huntsville, Alabama. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 10. Stickleback Behavior: A Brief Overview. By Daniel Bagur Pg 15. A Northern Minnow: Notes on the Captive Propagation of Notropis heterodon, the Blackchin Shiner. By Bob Muller Pg 17. Conservation Assessment for Bluehead Shiner (Pteronotropis hubbsi). By Anthony W. Ranvestel and Brooks M. Burr Pg 26. Fish Collecting Tips. By Bruce Scott Pg 39. The Best Sunnie in the Show. By Robert Bock 2004 Vol 30 No 2 Pg 1. American Beauties: Flagfin Shiners (Pteronotropis) of the Southeastern U.S. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 9. The Spotfin Killifish, Fundulus luciae, is More Common Than You Thought. By Bruce Stallsmith Pg 11. Goodeid Status Update, January 2004. By John Lyons Pg 19. Ancient Bowfin Presents New Ich-Theological Conundrum. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 21. Sturgeon Surgeons. By Karl Blankenship Pg 35. The Gawky but Graceful “Airplane Fish”. By Robert Bock 2004 Vol 30 No 3 Pg 1. Rare Treasure from River Bottom: Juvenile Goldeye (Hiodon alosoides) for Medium-Sized Aquaria . By Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 7. A Review of the Fishes and Freshwater Mussels of the Tippecanoe River Basin in Indiana, with Comments on Freshwater Mussel Life History. By Jeremy S.Tiemann and Bernadette L. Tiemann Pg 14. How Native Lampreys Are Portrayed by State Agencies: Positive and Negative Examples. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 17. Physical Habitat and the Assessment of Stream Health. By Doug Pirhalla Pg 35. Summer Satinfins. By Robert Bock 2004 Vol 30 No 4 Pg 1. Seldom-Seen Sunnies. By Rob Criswell Pg 4. Historical Notes on Lampreys in Wisconsin. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 9. Collecting and Selling Troglodytic Fish: A Novel Idea. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 11. Eel Fortunes. By Karl Blankenship Pg 16. Breeding Experiments with Fishes of the Sipsey Fork: Warrior Bridled Darter, Speckled Darter, Tuskaloosa Darter, and Burrhead Shiner. By Bob Muller Pg 20. Logperches: Masters of the Stone. By Noel Burkhead Pg 22. Desert Fish: Life on the Edge. By Linus Chen Pg 35. Can’t Keep It? Photograph It! By Robert Bock 2005 Vol 31 No 1 Pg 1. Reproductive Behavior in Banded Pygmy Sunfish, Elassoma zonatum (Elassomatidae), with Comments on Implications for Relationships of the Genus. By Alice F. Echelle and Anthony A. Echelle Pg 7. Treasure Hunting in the Suburbs: Discovery of the State-Endangered Iowa Darter (Etheostoma exile) in DuPage County, Illinois. By Christopher Gutmann Pg 9. Something Different: A Report from the 2004 NANFA Convention in Columbia, South Carolina. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 21. A Word About Water. By Robert Bock 2005 Vol 31 No 2 Pg 1. Breeding the Southern Sheepshead Minnow, Cyprinodon variegatus variegatus. By Charles A. Nunziata Pg 3. Are Temperate Fishes More Difficult to Spawn Than Tropicals? By Bob Muller Pg 6. The Changing Role of Aquarists in Aquatic Conservation. By Peter J. Unmack Pg 9. Madtoms: Some Cool Cats. By Jeremy S. Tiemann Pg 14. Sampling New York State’s Bashakill Marsh and Stream. By Norman Soule Pg 16. Fine Fare for Native Fishes: The Fairy Shrimp, Streptocephalus seali. By Tyler Strange and Heather Smith Pg 19. Naming Names (and Often Changing Them): A Native Fish Hobbyist’s Guide to Zoological Nomenclature. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 24. Elassoma: Great Fish for Small Quarters. By Dustin Smith Pg 25. In Praise of Poeciliids Part I: Heterandria and Gambusia. By Robert Bock 2005 Vol 31 No 3 Pg 1. Suckermouth Catfishes: Threats to Aquatic Ecosystems of the United States? By Jan Jeffrey Hoover, K. Jack Killgore and Alfred F. Cofrancesco Pg 9. Historical Use and Misuse of the Name “Carp”. By Maynard S. Raasch and Christopher Scharpf Pg 11. The National Fish Contest Is Underway. By David L. McNeely and Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 15. In Praise of Poeciliids Part II: Spectacular Sailfins. By Robert Bock Pg 17. Freshwater Fishes of the Northeastern United States, With Special Reference to Species of the Passaic River Drainage and Great Swamp Wetlands. By John Brill 2006 Vol 32 No 1 Pg 1. Darter Observations: Spawning, Eggs and Fry. By Bob Muller Pg 7. Historical Notes on American Eels (Anguilla rostrata) in the Upper Midwest. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 14. Status of Algansea aphanea (Cyprinidae), a Rare Mexican Fish. By John Lyons Pg 17. In Praise of Poeciliids Part Ill: Xiphophorus Notes. By Robert Bock Pg 19. What I Know About Flame Chubs and Who I Told. By Bruce Stallsmith Pg 20. A Rule Made to be Broken: Research and Education in Rocky Mountain National Park. By Claire C. McGrath 2006 Vol 32 No 2 Pg 1. Spawning the Goldspotted Killifish, Floridichthys carpio (Günther 1866) By Anthony C. Terceira Pg 4. Ohio’s Little Muskingum River: Notes on its Fishes and a New Drainage Record for the Variegate Darter, Etheostoma variatum. By Mike Austin Pg 9. Lake Erie Shark!. By Nick Zarlinga Pg 13. System Design for the Ultimate Native Fish Aquarium. By Todd D. Crail Pg 20. Fish Species Observed on the Regina and Sport Shipwrecks in Lake Huron. By Ronald G. Oldfield Pg 21. The Perfect Marine Snail for Your Freshwater Aquarium. By Chris Barnhart 2006 Vol 32 No 3 Pg 1. Back Into Saddleds: A Review of the Saddled Darters of North America. By Ray Katula Pg 7. The Wildlife Pond Renovation at Clinton Community Nature Center: Get to Know Native Fishes. By Nellie Neal Pg 11. Swamps, Sloughs, Springs, Sinkholes and More: An Expedition to the Floridian Gulf Coast. By Casper Cox Pg 20. Shortnose Sturgeon Found in Potomac. By Karl Blankenship Pg 23. The Alabammy-Whammy. By Charlie Grimes Pg 25. Sculpin Basics. By Robert Bock 2007 Vol 33 No 1 Pg 5. Pimephales: More Than Just Bait. By Jeremy S. Tiemann Pg 11. Spawning and Raising the Bantam Sunfish, Lepomis symmetricus. James E. Wetzel Pg 16. Some Historical Records of Lake Sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) in the Upper Midwest. By Philip A. Cochran 2007 Vol 33 No 2 Pg 1. The Second Annual Illinois Garvana. By Uland Thomas Pg 7. A New Ohio Drainage Record for the Bluebreast Darter, Etheostoma camurum. Mike Austin Pg 9. Too Cold. By Philip Kukulski Pg 11. While Not Endangered, American Eels Face Numerous Threats. By Karl Blankenship Pg 13. The New York State-Threatened Longear Sunfish, Lepomis megalotis: Collection, Rearing and Recovery Efforts. By Eric W. Reynolds Pg 14. Juvenile White Sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus, in Laboratory Aquaria. By Krista A. Varble and Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 20. The Bluefin Killifish, Lucania goodei: A Summary Review. By Charles A. Nunziata 2007 Vol 33 No 3 Pg 1. Life History Study and Population Structure of Vermilion Darter (Etheostoma chermocki) from Turkey Creek, Jefferson County, Alabama, and Warrior Darter (E. bellator) from Gurley Creek, Blount County, Alabama. By Jenjit Khudamrongsawat Pg 8. What Exactly is a Species?. Christopher Scharpf Pg 11. End of Life Behavior in the Mountain Brook Lamprey, Ichthyomyzon greeleyi. By Gretchen E. Walker Pg 15. Westsylvania’s Aquatic Gems. By Rob Criswell Pg 21. Additional Notes on the History of American Eels (Anguilla rostrata) in the Upper Midwest. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 23. Breeding Wild-Caught and F1 Pirate Perch (Aphredoderus sayanus). By Bob Muller 2008 Vol 34 No 1 Pg 1. Scaly Sand Darter (Ammocrypta vivax): Observations and Captive Spawning. By Bob Muller Pg 3. Alewife and Blueback Herring are Species of Concern Facing Many Threats. Dwayne Meadows Pg 7. Uniseine Version 4.0. By Philip Kukulski Pg 9. Notes on the Captive Spawning of Fundulus bifax. By Joseph Scanlan Pg 12. North America’s Freshwater Fishes: Where They Came From, How They Got Here, and Why They Are Where They Are. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 16. The Role of Reproductive Behavior in the Conservation of Fishes: Examples from the Great Plains Riverine Fishes. By Mark L. Wildhaber Pg 24. Mystery Fish Identified (Again!). By Philip A. Cochran 2008 Vol 34 No 2 Pg 1. Searching for Sawfish: A History of the Hunt. By Jan Jeffrey Hoover Pg 16. Point-and-Shoot Digital Photography for the Beginner. By Uland Thomas Pg 21. My Native Fish Winter Cooling Device. By Thomas Glassburner Pg 23. Syngnathus scovelli, the Elusive Freshwater Pipefish. By Mike Hellweg 2008 Vol 34 No 3 Pg 1. Tiny Fish/Big Battle: 30 Years After TVA and the Snail Darter Clashed, the Case Still Echoes in Caselaw, Politics and Popular Culture. By Zygmunt J. B. Plater Pg 9. The Mummichog: Master of Survival. Robert Bock Pg 14. Status of the Stone Darter, Etheostoma derivativum, in Kentucky. By Robert L. Hopkins II and Lisa J. Fisk Pg 20. Multiple Causes of Central Valley Chinook Salmon Decline. By Peter B. Moyle Pg 23. A Simple Technique for Digital Imaging of Live and Preserved Small Fish Specimens. By Juergen Herler, Lovrenc Lipej and Tihomir Makovec 2009 Vol 35 No 2 Pg 1. "Willow Cats" for Sale? Madtoms (Genus Noturus) as Bait in the Upper Mississippi River Valley. By Philip A. Cochran and Mark A. Zoller Pg 9. Care and Spawning of the Endangered Mohave Tui Chub in Captivity. By Thomas P. Archdeacon and Scott A. Bonar Pg 19. Simplified Uniseine Construction. By Philip Kukulski Pg 21.Photo Tank Construction. By Uland Thomas Pg 25.The Quest for the Southern Studfish, Fundulus stellifer or Remind Me Again Why I Do This To Myself. By Thomas Ganley 2009 Vol 35 No 3 Pg 2. A Lake Sturgeon Tale: Part 1. By Casper Cox Pg 7. Construction Considerations and Design Specifications for a Flowing Water Spawning System for the Culture of River Minnows: Part 1. By Barry Thoele Pg 12. Tate's Hell Remembered. By Keith Hudgins and Casper Cox Pg 19.The Incredible Journey. By Stuart Welsh Pg 21.Spawning My Johnny Darters (Etheostoma nigrum). By Brian J. Torreano 2010 Vol 35 No 4 Pg 2. A Lake Sturgeon Tale: Part 2. By Casper Cox Pg 6. Construction Considerations and Design Specifications for a Flowing Water Spawning System for the Culture of River Minnows: Part 2. By Barry Thoele Pg 12. Okaloosa Darter On the Road to Recovery. By Donald Imm, Denise Rowell, Tom MacKenzie Pg 14.Quest for the Orangespotted Sunfish . By Lance Merry Pg 18.2009 Convention Recap: Part 1. By Brian Skidmore Pg 23. 2010 Convention Teaser: The Nevadan Desert and Ash Meadows. By Peter Unmack 2010 Vol 36 No 1 Pg 6. NANFA Convention 2010: Part 2: North Beyond Las Vegas. By Peter Unmack Pg 10. Fictional Accounts of Predation on Lampreys. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 12. AquaCam Snorkel Camp 2009: Part 1 . By Casper Cox Pg 16. Introduction to the Third Edition of the Florida Collecting Guide. By Charlie Nunziata Pg 25. North American Killifish - Part 1 Lucania goodei Jordan 1880 A Summary Review. By Charlie Nunziata Pg 40. Annotated Checklist of North American Freshwater Fishes, Including Subspecies and Undescribed Forms Addenda & Errata #5. By Christopher Scharpf 2011 Vol 36 No 2 Pg 2. AquaCam Snorkel Camp 2009: Part 2 . By Casper Cox Pg 7. A Tank Full of Middle Fork Willamette River Natives . By Eric Hanneman, Ph.D. Pg 13. Chicago Lakefront Fishes . By Dr. Philip Willink Pg 19. Breeding Minnows . By Dr. Robert J. Goldstein 2011 Vol 36 No 3 Pg 2. Ash Meadows Wildlife Refuge. By Cristi R. Baldino, Sharon S. McKelvey, and Darrick S. Weissenfluh Pg 8. The Source of Water for Nevada's Ash Meadows Springs. By Lisa L. Stillings Pg 12. Nevada Desert Adventure NANFA Convention 2010 . By Casper Cox Pg 25. Fixing the Broken Triangle: Working to Build Bridges Between Aquarium Hobbyists, Fisheries Biologists, and Academics. By Nick Zarlinga 2011 Vol 36 No 4 Pg 2. Indoor Spawning and Raising of Warmouth, Lepomis gulosus. By Luke P. Hirsch and James E. Wetzel Pg 7. Aquarists and Fisheries Managers: Building Bridges To Fill Knowledge Gaps On Native Fishes. By Peter Unmack, Jon C. Sjöberg, David L. Ward, Steve Parmenter, and Bob Muller Pg 10. The Decline of North American Freshwater Fishes . By Stephen J. Walsh, Howard L. Jelks and Noel M. Burkhead Pg 18. Conservation Fisheries, Inc. and the Reintroduction of Our Native Species. By J.R. Shute and Pat Rakes with edits by Casper Cox Pg 23. Fish in Focus: Rosyface Chub, Hybopsis rubrifrons. By Michael Lucas 2012 Vol 37 No 1 Pg 2. Trawling Down the River. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 7. Build it and they will come. By Fritz Rohde Pg 13. Observations of Flame Chub Spawning, Egg, and Larva Development. By Bob Muller Pg 17. Observations on the Aquarium Spawning of the Xenisma Group of Killifishes in Alabama. By Joseph Scanlan Pg 22. The Darter That Gets No Respect-The Mud Darter. By Ray Katula 2012 Vol 37 No 2 Pg 2. Status of the Hornyhead Chub Nocomis biguttatus in Minnesota. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 11. Reproductive Ecology of the Relict Population of Ironcolor Shiner Notropis chalybaeus in Headwaters of the San Marcos River Texas. By Joshuah S. Perkin, Zachary R. Shattuck, and Timothy H. Bonner Pg 22. The Fish and Wildlife Service you Don't Know. By David Klinger Pg 26. Fish in Focus: Mighty Mudminnows. By Michael Lucas Pg 28. What in the World is a Darter Hunt? By Jenny Kruckenberg 2012 Vol 37 No 3 Pg 2. 48 hours of the serpent_Ganley. By Thomas Ganley Pg 4. Building and Maintaining a Native Fish Pond and Stream. By Patrick T. Johnson Pg 11. Forays into Northwestern Iowa Yield New Records of Plains Topminnow (Fundulus sciadicus) and More Data on Pugnose Shiner (Notropis anogenus). By Konrad Schmidt and Robert Hrabik Pg 18. Egg Mimicry Observed in Slimy Sculpin (Cottus cognatus). By Ray Katula Pg 22. Serendipity and Lampreys. By Rudolf G. Arndt Pg 26. Fish in Focus: Pygmy Killifish (Leptolucania ommata) and Least Killifish (Heterandria formosa). By Thomas Gangley Pg 28. New occurrence of Pygmy Whitefish (Prosopium coulterii). By Konrad Schmidt 2012 Vol 37 No 4 Pg 2. NANFA members search for Minnesota's rarest fishes. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 8. Elassoma zonatum E_okejenokee and E_evergladei-habitats and comparative observations. By Jörg Bohlen and Arne Nolte Pg 18. Fish in Focus: Elassoma gilberti, the Gulf Coast Pygmy Sunfish. By Erica Wieser. Pg 21. Breeding Fantail Darters in Captivity. By Rachel Moran 2013 Vol 38 No 1 Pg 2. Plains Topminnow - the minnow that isn't a minnow. By Chelsey Pasbrig Pg 8. A unique Eagle Scout project. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 11. Search for the Redsdie Dace in Michigan's most polluted river. By Kristina Blott and Robert Muller Pg 18. Flat Shoals plus 136 years. By Michael Wolfe Pg 23. A pack of wild dogfish - aggregation by adult Amia calva. By Collin Nienhaus and Clinton Nienhaus Pg 29. Scientfic value of keeping native fishes in Aquaria. By Lawrence M. Page 2013 Vol 38 No 2 Pg 2. King of perches-observations of captive Roanoke Logperch. By Chris Crippen Pg 9. Logistics for public display of Roanoke Logperch. By Chris Crippen Pg 13. Fin Anomalies in Blacknose Dace (Rhinichthys atratulus) from Southern Minnesota. By Melissa Markert Pg 19. Minnow Trap Surveys for Deepwater (Myoxocephalus thompsonii) and Slimy (Cottus cognatus) Sculpin in Northeastern Minnesota Lakes. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 23. Catching Air - Those Magnificent Jumping Suwannee Sturgeons. By Ken Sulak 2013 Vol 38 No 3 Pg 2. Biodiversity on the (Blue) Line. By Kevin Kubach Pg 8. Gilt Darters return to New York's Allegeny River. By Doug Carlson and Doug Fischer Pg 11. Collecting at the 57th Parallel North. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 18. The Phalen enigma - Rainbow Darters in a lake? By Ray Katula Pg 22. Tiny fish under big skies - why minnows matter. By Tom Dickson Pg 26. Fish phenology in an urban stream. By Konrad Schmidt 2013 Vol 38 No 4 Pg 2. Bluehead Chub, Nocomis leptocephalus (Girard 1856), the First Species of Freshwater Fish Scientifically Described from North Carolina. By Bryn H. Tracy Pg 9. Fish in Focus: Elassoma evergladei. By Dustin Smith Pg 11. How Do You Spell Success. By Jim Bland Pg 23. Back to the Swamp. By Dustin Smith Pg 26. My Particular Apogee. By Matt Knepley Pg 27. Mudfish on the Menu-Rise of the much Maligned Bowfin. By Ken Sulak Pg 31. Blue Ridge Parkway Snorkel Camp. By Casper Cox 2014 Vol 39 No 1 Pg 2. Mummichogs Establish Beachhead in Michigan. By Bob Muller Pg 5. Say! What a Lot of Fish There Are. By Robert Hrabik and Lance Merry Pg 8. Noah’s Fish Ark. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 18. Tiny See-through Ghosts of the Deep and Dark Rivers. By Brian Zimmerman Pg 22. Fish in Focus: Christmas Darter. By Matt Knepley Pg 26. Spawning the “Green” Banded Darter. By Ray Katula Pg 29. The Glacial Relict Fishes of South Dakota’s Sandhills. By Chelsey Pasbrig 2014 Vol 39 No 2 Pg 2. Blue Ridge Parkway Fish Survey, 2007. By Ed Scott Pg 7. Artificial Spawning Site for Pirate Perch. By James Wetzel and J. Tyler Edwards Pg 9. Recovery Of Oregon Chub Helps Mark The 40th Anniversary Of The Endangered Species Act. By Paul Scheerer Pg 11. History Of Changes In The Willamette River And Effects On Oregon Chub. By Paul Scheerer Pg 13. Observations On Spawning By Captive Sand Shiners (Notropis stramineus) From Minnesota. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 15. Bluebreast Darter Removed From Ohio’s List Of Endangered And Threatened Fishes. By Brian Zimmerman Pg 17. Spawning My Milwaukee River Spotfin Shiners, Legally!!! By Brian J. Torreano Pg 22. Darters On The Brain: Insights And Observations Of A Redline Fanatic. By Nick Little Pg 25. Occurrence Of Least Killifish At The Northern Limit Of Its Range In South And North Carolina. By Travis J. Nelson and Erin J. Burge Pg 33. Corcoran Education Grant Report A Life-Size Sturgeon Educational Display For Free Interagency Loan. By Thomas E. Brooking Pg 36. 2013 NANFA Convention Summary. By Josh Blaylock 2014 Vol 39 No 3 Pg 2. The Native Stream Fishes of Hawaii. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 9. A Life History Study Of Minnesota’s Great Northerner: The Iowa Darter. By Jay T. Hatch and James D. Johnson Pg 17. Brood Size in a Western Mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis) from Wisconsin. By Philip A. Cochran Pg 18. Monitoring Feral Oriental Weatherfish Infestations in New York State. By Scott Wells Pg 22. Sex in the Suwannee, The Secretive Love Life of Gulf Sturgeons. By Ken Sulak Pg 25. What in the World is a Bioblitz? By Jenny Kruckenberg, Konrad Schmidt and Bryan Stefansky 2014 Vol 39 No 4 Pg 2. Oklahoma's Paddlefish (Polyodon spathula) Research and Caviar Program. By Brandon Brown Pg 6. The Illinois Redspotted Sunfish (Lepomis miniatus) Project: Not Possible Without NANFA. By Jeremy Tiemann et al. Pg 9. Keeping and Spawning Arkansas Darters (Etheostoma cragini). By Ray Katula Pg 14. Fishing for Aquaria. By Jon Andrews Pg 17. The Etyfish Project, Fish Name Etymology Database. By Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara Pg 21. How I Got to Where I am Today. By Robert E. Jenkins Pg 22. History in Jars. By Emily Hilts Pg 26. The 2014 NANFA Convention, North Carolina 2015 Vol 40 No 1 Pg 2. The Clinch Dace short stories about a short fish. By Michael Moore Pg 5. The Blue Sucker and a Lost America: An Essay. By Corey Geving Pg 8. Black Horse, Blue Sucker. By Olaf Nelson Pg 11. Lake Sturgeon Egg Collection. By Kathlina Alford Pg 14. Foray into the Wilds of Iowa Finds Northern Pearl Dace and Least Darter but Not Northern Sunfish. By John Olson Pg 19. Hybrids, Oddities, and Variation Observed in Minnesota Fishes. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 26. Dusky Darters: A North American Native Fish new to Michigan. By Robert Muller Pg 29. Pond Culture of the Bluenose Shiner Pteronotropis welaka. By Brian Zimmerman Pg 31. Glassworms: A Live or Frozen Treat for even the Most Finicky Fish. By Konrad Schmidt 2015 Vol 40 No 2 Pg 3. Eureka, Topeka! (Shiner, That Is). By Ray Katula Pg 8. Summary of Genetic Studies related to Notropis topeka (Topeka Shiner). By George R. Cunningham Pg 10. Minnesota Fishes: Just How Many Species are there Anyway?. By Jay Hatch Pg 22. TYCC puts in a Hard Day’s work on Pueblo Fish Passage Project. By Melanie Dabovich Pg 24. O2 tabs do they Really Work?. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 26. Photography and Post-Processing Techniques for Native Fishes. By Scott Smith and Jesse Bissette Pg 30. Blood River Bottoms Wildlife Management Area Provides Habitat for Rare Aquatic Species. By Matthew Thomas and Stephanie Brandt 2015 Vol 40 No 3 Pg 4. Spring Break 2015 NANFA Style. By Casper Cox (with help from Fritz Rohde) Pg 15. Species in a Bucket. By Edwin Philip Pister Pg 21. Fish in Focus: Yellowfin Shiner, Notropis lutipinnis. By Matt Knepley and Michael Lucas Pg 23. Panchax vs. Killifish: The Origin of “Panchax”. By Albert J. Klee 2015 Vol 40 No 4 Pg 3. Gar Farming. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 10. Late-Spawning Suckers of New York’s Adirondack Mountains. By Douglas Carlson, Richard Morse, and Evon Hekkala Pg 15. One Member’s Road to Percidae Husbandry. By Ken Glackin Pg 22. 2015 NANFA Convention in Oklahoma. By Jenny Kruckenberg Pg 33. The NANFA 2015 Convention: An Oklahoma Perspective. By Brandon Brown Pg 34. North Carolina Biologists Hope to Restore Rare Fish in Pee Dee River. From NC Wildlife Resources Commission Pg 36. How I got to where I am today. By Henry W. Robison 2016 Vol 41 No 1 Pg 3. The Goodeids something new, rare, and different. By Greg Sage Pg 7. Confounding Ciscoes. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 16. Kentucky’s Threatened and Endangered Fishes Blackside Dace (Chrosomus cumberlandensis). By Douglas Michael A. Floyd, PhD Pg 19. Some Observations on the Waccamaw Killifish (Fundulus waccamensis) with Notes on Spawning in Captivity. By Doug Stuber, with Joseph Scanlan, MD Pg 23. The “Chrome Minnow” of North America keeping and spawning the rainbow shiner Notropis chrosomus). By Ray Katula Pg 26. Current State of the Invasion: 50 Years of the Black Acara in Florida. By Ryan Crutchfield Pg 30. Let the Invasion Begin. By Melvin C. Bowler 2016 Vol 41 No 2 Pg 3. From the “Ol’ South” To farther South: Killies, Mollies, Cichlids, Characins, and Knifefish in Honduras. By Dustin Smith Pg 13. My Idea for Long-Distance Fish Transport. By Ken Glackin Pg 16. Curious Cases of Fish Occurrence: Minnow Mysteries. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 23. Accidental Discovery Increases Killifish Breeding Success. By Arthur J J Leuterman, Ph.D Pg 25. Serendipity the Nothonotus wapiti Story. By Dave Etnier Pg 27. Buck Darter Described by Friend of NANFA Tom Near and NANAFA Member Matt Thomas. By Thomas J. Near and Matthew R. Thomas Pg 28. How I got to where I am today; Reflections the Evolution of California Department of Fish and Wildlife Programs Since 1953. By Phil Pister Pg 30. Fish in Focus: Arctic Grayling, Thymallus articus. By Matt Knepley 2016 Vol 41 No 3 Pg 3. Suckers, Students, and Science: Studying the Sicklefin redhorse in Georgia. By Dr. Johnathan Davis Pg 9. A Darter Festival?. By Casper Cox Pg 17. Iowa’s Longear Sunfish Mystery Solved...Maybe. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 19. Interview: Roughfish.com founder Corey Geving. By Jenny Kruckenberg Pg 22. An Introduction to Underwater Photography. By Bryce Gibson Pg 26. Many Hands Make Small Work; New Stream Crossing Benefits People and Native Fishes. By Craig Springer Pg 28. A new species of darter from Missouri: keeping and culturing the Meramec saddled darter (Etheostoma erythrozonum). By Ray Katula 2016 Vol 41 No 4 Pg 5. Iowa’s Curious Record for Lake Chub (Couesius plumbeus). By John Olson Pg 19. BAPPING Natives. By Bryan Stefansky Pg 23. In Search of Minnesota’s Crossover Connections. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 33. The 2016 NANFA Convention in New Hampshire. By Joshua Jarvis 2017 Vol 42 No 1 Pg 5. Fundulus notii, a Starhead Topminnow. By Charles Nunziata Pg 10. Pure Colorado Trout Saved by California. By Phil Pister Pg 16. Freshwater Snorkeling: Why and How to Get More People into the Water. By Jim Herrig Pg 21. Some Observations of Shortnose Gar (Lepisosteus platostomus) Behaviors in the Mississippi River and Bowfin (Amia calva) Feeding. By Ray Katula Pg 23. A Southern Illinois Outing. By Lance Merry Pg 25. Keeping the Yucatan Sailfin Molly (Poecilia velfera). By Greg Sage Pg 29. Bunker Nature Center's Snorkeling the Stillwater River Project. By Deb Oexmann 2017 Vol 42 No 2 Pg 3. Pacific Lamprey Restoration in the Elwha River Drainage Following Dam Removals. By Mary L. Moser and Rebecca L. Paradis Pg 9. Lifelist Angling the Peruvian Amazon. By Josh Leisen Pg 22. Peruvian Amazon 2014. By Dustin Smith Pg 27. Fishes Found Near Pucallpa, Peru. By Scott Smith Pg 37. Keeping and Breeding the One-Sided Livebearer Jenynsia lineata. By Greg Sage 2017 Vol 42 No 3 Pg 5. Estimating length, weight, and age of Central Stoneroller (Campostoma anomalum) using bone measurements. By Richard Snow Pg 11. The Art of Seining. By Bob Hrabik Pg 20. Breeding Fantail Darters (Etheostoma flabellare). By Kara Millon Pg 28. Earthing Affection: Natchez Trace Parkway. By Lance Merry 2017 Vol 42 No 4 Pg 5. Show-Me the Fishes: A Re-cap of the 2017 NANFA Convention, Meramec State Park, Missouri, June 8–13. By Bob Hrabik Pg 9. 2017 NANFA Convention Presentation Summaries. By Jenny Kruckenberg Pg 17. Darter Photography with a Little "Flare". By Tyler Goodale Pg 19. Blue Lines and Yellow Trout: Apache Trout, from Anomymity to the State Fish of Arizona. By Craig Springer Pg 21. How I Got Where I Am. By Don Orth Pg 25. Kentucky's Endangered and Threatened Fishes: Relict Darter (Etheostoma chienense). By Michael A. Floyd Pg 27. Spending Spring Break Exploring Tennesee's Fish Diversity. By Noah Daun 2018 Vol 43 No 1 Pg 3. The University of Tennessee Etnier Ichthyology Collection by UTEIC staff Pg 5. The Distribution and Status of Seven Nonindigenous Species in the Yankin-Pee Dee River Drainage in North Carolina. By Bryn H. Tracy Pg 14. The Real Treasure at the End of the Rainbow. By Isaac Szabo Pg 16. Corcoran Grant Report: Coho Pre-Spawn Mortality on Longfellow Creek. By Kathryn Davis Pg 20. Two Days in Acapulco. By Ryan Crutchfield Pg 25. Did the Harelip Sucker Once Call Minnesota Home? By Konrad Schmidt Pg 29. I’ve Got Killie Fry! Now What? By Bob Meyer 2018 Vol 43 No 2 Pg 4. Appalachian Adventures. By Jenna A. Crovo Pg 8. Finding Natalis: An Adventure in Getting Specimens. ByJames E. Burgess Pg 11. Streams, Rivers, and Lakes, Oh My! By Cheryl Cheadle Pg 14. The Georgia Highlands Wetland and Stream Experience (Gerald C. Corcoran Education Grant Report). By Jason Christian and Veronica Morin Pg 17. Aiming for 86. By Nick Gevock Pg 20. A New Minnesota Locality for Deepwater Sculpin (Myoxocephalus thompsonii). By Konrad Schmidt Pg 28. Fish in Focus: Mud Sunfish (Acantharchus pomotis). By Matt Knepley 2018 Vol 43 No 3 Pg 2. How do Blind Cavefish Find their Way? By Michael Miller Pg 5. My Experience with Platinum Alligator Gar, the Most Valuable Native Aquarium Fish? By Peter Perschbacher Pg 7. Tank-spawned Bluenose Shiners. By Philip Kukulski Pg 11. Learning Lessons About Lampreys. By Don Orth Pg 15. In Search of Minnesota's Missing Fishes. By Konrad Schmidt 2018 Vol 43 No 4 Pg 3. The Striped Blenny (Chasmodes bosquianus) and other Blennies of the Genus Chasmodes. By Kevin G. Wilson Pg 10. Showcasing Biological Recovery of Streams in Southeast Ohio Affected by Historical Coal Mining. By Amy Mackey Pg 15. Spring Creek in the Spring. By Cheryl Cheadle Pg 19. Why Microfishing. By Tim Aldridge Pg 22. Chasing Species in the Southern Applachians: A 2018 NANFA Convention Report. By Josh Lesien Pg 25. Summary of NANFA Convention Speakers and Presentations, June 9, 2018 By Jenny Kruckenberg 2019 Vol 44 No 1 Pg 4. Keeping Ameiurus natalis. By James E. Burgess Pg 9. Historical accounts of Cedar River in Iowa Suggest Harelip Sucker many have Once Ocurred in Stream. By John Olson Pg 12. A Marathon March for Mexican Goodeids. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 25. Return of the Rapids: Could the Upper Mississippi River Run Wild Again? By Ellen Burkhardt Pg 29. Microfishing for Darters. By Tim Aldridge Pg 36. The Mystery of Morone: Solved at Last? By Christopher Scharpf 2019 Vol 44 No 2 Pg 5. Fish in Focus: Inconnu,the Unknown Fish. By Mike W. Bryant Pg 10. Exploration: A High School Student's Summer Project in the Pine Barrens. By Brandon Li Pg 15. Pugnose Shiner Restoration Efforts in a Lake Ontario Bay in New York. By Doug M. Carlson, John R. Foster, and Brent Lehman Pg 17. A Foray into the Wilds of Minnesota: Northern Sunfish (Lepomis peltastes) Survey in the Boundary Waters. By John Olson 2019 Vol 44 No 3 Pg 3. The Life, Death, and Rebirth of the Fishes of the Teuchitlán Springs of Central Mexico. By John Lyons Pg 8. Zacapu Lake, a Hot Spot of Native Fishes. By Arely Ramírez-García and Omar Domínguez-Domínguez Pg 11. Were Blue Pike (Sander vitreus glaucus) Stocked in Minnesota? By Konrad Schmidt Pg 14. Digitizing North America's Fishes. By Jennifer Lupparell, Adam Summers, and Thaddaeus Buser Pg 20. Basement Preservationists: Can Hobbyists Save Rare Fishes from Extinction? By Adam Welz 2019 Vol 44 No 4 Pg 3. The Mystery of the Banded Killifish Fundulus diaphanus Population Explosion: Where did they all come from? By Philip W. Willink, Jeremy S. Tiemann, Joshua L. Sherwood, Eric R. Larson, Abe Otten, and Brian Zimmerman Pg 7. The Oklahoma Conservation Commission's Road to High-Quality Data. By Cheryl Cheadle Pg 11. NANFA 2019 Convention in Mississippi. By Jen Kruckenberg Pg 19. Redhorsing Around in Western North Carolina. By Tim Aldridge Pg 23. Tennessee River Rescue, Snorkel Style. By Casper Cox Pg 28. Being an Aquarist. By Stephen Beaman 2020 Vol 45 No 1 Pg 3. Another Slice of Mexico. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 21. Bringing Native Fishes into the Classroom: the Bioma Project. By Bill Tong Pg 24. The Unexpected Presence of the Slender Madtom in Rock Lake, Wisconsin. By John Lyons, Dave Marshall, Laura Stremick-Thompson, Patricia Cicero, and Will Wawrzyn Pg 28. Who you Callin' "Chubby?" Chubsuckers are too Cool to Care. By Don Orth Pg 33. The Authorial History of Esox masquinongy. By Christopher Scharpf 2020 Vol 45 No 2 Pg 3. Remembering Dr. William Roston (1936-2019). By Casper Cox, Henry Robison, and Brooks Burr Pg 8. A Fishy Enigma Called Pirate Perch. By Don Orth Pg 11. Lost in Translation: the True Meaning of "Natalis" in the name of the Yellow Bullhead Ameiurus natalis. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 18. Garden Ponds for Postage Stamp Yards. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 24. The Seagreen Affair. By Tim Aldridge Pg 27. Captive Culture and Husbandry of North American Fishes. By Ray Katula 2020 Vol 45 No 3 Pg 6. The Bass Menagerie: A Micropterus Odyssey. By Guy Eroh Pg 14. Pugnose Minnow Puzzle. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 16. It was the Least I could do...the Least Brook Lamprey, that is. By Jerry Reynolds Pg 19. Trip Report: Kentucky, North Carolina, and South Carolina. By Noah Daun and Jason Lins Pg 25. Hey, that's Still not a Trout: Getting to Know your Knottyheads. By Luke Etchison and Jacob Rash 2020 Vol 45 No 4 Pg 3. Piscine Prospecting: Fish Inventories in Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve. By Nate Cathcart and Joe Giefer Pg 12. The Sciencenter 2019 Corcoran Grant Report. By Colin Meeks Pg 14. Snorkeling in June in East Tennessee. By Lock Cabe Pg 17. Did the Five-Meter-Long Largetooth Sawfish that Hangs from the Rafters at the University of Iowa Once Swim in Louisiana Waters? By Jason C. Seitz and John D. Waters Pg 23. A Brief Zoogeographic History of Tonguetied Minnow Exoglossum laurae. By Kenneth J. Oswald Pg 26. The Fall and Rise of Lake Sturgeon Acipenser fulvescens: King of Fish. By Konrad Schmidt 2021 Vol 46 No 1 Pg 3. Identifying North Carolina’s Suckers May Not Be as Hard as You Think. By Bryn H. Tracy, Scott A. Smith, and Fred (Fritz) C. Rohde Pg 15. Fish In Focus: Tamazula Redtail Splitfin Xenotoca lyonsi. By Litzi Hartley Pg 19. Microfishing for North American Natives in South Florida. By Arthur Kosakowski Pg 21. Fish TV: Observing Native Suckers Under the Ice. By Collin A. Nienhaus 2021 Vol 46 No 2 Pg 3. Virginia’s Unsung Catfishes. By Michael J. Pinder Pg 7. New Records for Slimy Sculpin Cottus cognatus and Northern Sunfish Lepomis peltastes in the Boundary Waters. By John Olson Pg 18. Fish in Focus: Orangefin Darter. By Jake Wade Pg 20. Conserving the Starhead Topminnow Fundulus dispar in Wisconsin: 1. Current Status and Threats. By John Lyons, David W. Marshall, Sue Marcquenski, Tim Larson, and Jean Unmuth Pg 27. The Curious Cases of Deepwater Sculpin Myoxocephalus thompsonii and Lake Whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis in Lake St. Croix of Minnesota and Wisconsin. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 30. Can Freshwater Darters (Percina) Pass the Mirror Test? By Scott Nelson and Dr. Erika C. Martin (et al.) 2021 Vol 46 No 3 Pg 4. Conserving the Starhead Topminnow Fundulus dispar in Wisconsin: 2. Conservation Aquaculture. By David W. Marshall, John Lyons, Sue Marcquenski, Tim Larson, and Jean Unmuth Pg 10. Lesueur’s Lampreys of 1826: The Quest to Find Wilkinson Cave and Evidence of American Brook Lamprey in the St. Francis River, Missouri. By Robert A. Hrabik Pg 17. Ahead by a Whisker: Freshwater Catfish (Family Ictaluridae) Diversity in North Carolina. By Bryn H. Tracy, Scott A. Smith, Jesse L. Bissette, and Fred C. Rohde Pg 26. Amazing American Eels. By Konrad Schmidt 2021 Vol 46 No 4 Pg 3. The Buck Darter Etheostoma nebra and Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. By Nathan Click Pg 6. My Watershed is Special: Candy Darter Etheostoma osburni and Native Fishes of the Monongahela National Forest, West Virginia. By Chad Landress and Rachel Geiger Pg 8. A Fishery Biologist's Year on the Lower Wisconsin River. By John Lyons Pg 16. Pursuing Native Fishes in San Diego. By Arthur Kosakowski Pg 19. Aquatic Conservation at the National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium. By Andrew Allison Pg 22. How I Got to Where I am Today. By Fred (Fritz) Rohde 2022 Vol 47 No 1 Pg 6. Chasing Phantom Records: My Quest for the Golden Redhorse in the Mississippi River Headwaters. By Konrad Schmidt Pg 9. Discovering a Fish Fauna: A History of the Fishes and Fish Scientists of Wisconsin up to the Publication of George C. Becker’s Fishes of Wisconsin in 1983. By John Lyons Pg 19. Just Below the Surface: Topminnow (Family Fundulidae) Diversity in North Carolina. By Bryn H. Tracy, Scott A. Smith, Jesse L. Bissette, and Fred C. Rohde Pg 27. Longhead Darter Rediscovery in Ohio. By Brian Zimmerman Pg 29. Johnny Spawned Lately. By Randy Carey 2022 Vol 47 No 2 Pg 4. Remembrance: Carter Rowell Gilbert (1930–2022). By Stephen J. Walsh Pg 8. Diversity Fishing Contest: 2021 Results and Invitation to Compete in 2022. By Brian Zimmerman Pg 11. Feeding Fish Bloodworms (Chironomidae/Chironomus): Possible Health Risks to Hobbyists. By Thomas M. Keevin Pg 14. Native Fishes as Ambassadors for our Great States. By Lawrence Kent Pg 18. Streamline Chub Erimystax dissimilis and Tippecanoe Darter Nothonotus tippecanoe Discovered in Illinois. By Adam Jones, Jeremy S. Tiemann, Brant E. Fisher, Trent Thomas, Jacob Adams, Cassi Moody-Carpenter, and Robert E. Colombo Pg 22. Wandering Warmouth or Shanghaied Sunnies. By Konrad Schmidt 2022 Vol 47 No 3 Pg 2. Distribution of the Bluefin Killifish Lucanei goodei in George and the carolinas. By Zach Alley, Fritz Rohde, Erin J. Burge, William R. Burge, Wyatt R. Burge, and Brett Albanese Pg 8. Conserving the Starhead Topminnow Fundulus dispar in Wisconsin: 3. Re-Establishment Success! By John Lyons, David W. Marshall, Sue Marcquenski, Tim Larson, and Jean Unmuth Pg 17. Urban Fish Survey in North Central Texas Shows Value of Riparian Nature Preserves. By Jeremy V. Jordan Pg 20. An Altered Prairie Stream: Historical Fish Fauna Changes in Minnesota’s Blue Earth River. By Collin Nienhaus 2022 Vol 47 No 4 Pg 1. An Updated Annotated List of Wisconsin's Fishes. By John Lyons and Konrad Schmidt 2023 Vol 48 No 1 Pg 6. Wisconsin's Disappearing Oxbow Lakes. By David Marshall Pg 9. Presettlement Fish Communities of Iowa’s Natural (Glacial) Lakes. By John Olson Pg 20. A Recap of the 2022 NANFA Convention. By Jenny Kruckenberg Pg 30. All Bowed Up. By Henry Veggian 2023 Vol 48 No 2 Pg 4. In Search of New Mexico’s Native Trout. By John Lyons Pg 9. The Log from Kotzebue Sound: Chasing Anadromous Fishes along the Arctic Circle. By Nate Cathcart Pg 18. First-Year Biology Students Investigate Microplastics in a University Ichthyological Collection. By Erica C. Martin et al Pg 23. The Status of the Redfin Shiner Lythrurus umbratilis in Iowa: Another One Biting the Dust?. By John Olson Pg 32. DNA Unveils New Freshwater Fish Species in California. By Peter B. Moyle and Matthew A. Campbell Pg 30. Conservation Fisheries, Inc.: A Lifeline for Endangered and Threatened Species. By Shannon Murphy 2023 Vol 48 No 3 Pg 4. Memories of Bruce Bauer, David Etnier, and Phil Pister. Pg 9. A Recap of the 2023 NANFA Convention in South Carolina. By Jenny Kruckenberg Pg 17. From the Land of Ice & Snow to the Palmetto State: Our Expedition to and from South Carolina for the NANFA Convention, March 16–19, 2023. By John Olson Pg 25. Collecting Native Fishes 101. By Konrad Schmidt 2023 Vol 48 No 4 Pg 5. Memories of Robert Jenkins. Pg 7. Eight Ways to Name a Fish: A Native Fish Enthusiast’s Guide to Zoological Nomenclature. By Christopher Scharpf Pg 16. What’s in a Name? Frecklebelly Madtom Noturus munitus. By Craig Springer Pg 17. Thirty-Six Hours Across Florida. By Arthur Kosakowski Pg 19. New Records of an Established Inland Population of Non-Native Sheepshead Minnow Cyprinodon variegatus from Rock Creek, Brazos River Basin, Texas. By Jeremy Jordan Pg 22. Distribution of American Brook Lamprey Lethenteron appendix in North Carolina. By Fritz Rohde, Bryn H. Tracy, and Michael Fisk |
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