Table Of ContentTITLE INDEX TO VOLUME 31 -  1995 
An Analysis of Seasonal Fecal Coliform Levels in the Tchefuncte River 
—  Donald E. Barbé and John C. Francis 
Artificial Recharge in Saskatchewan: Current Developments 
—  J. E. Digney and J. A. Gillies 
Assessing Environmental Effects of Severe Sustained Drought 
—  Thomas B. Hardy 
Assessment of Gully-Control Structures in the Rio Nutria Watershed, Zuni Reservation, 
New Mexico 
—  Allen C. Gellis, Andres Cheama, Vanissa Laahty, and Sheldon Lalio 
Assessment of Restored Riverine Habitat Using RCHARC 
—  Mitchell R. Peters, Steven R. Abt, Chester C. Watson, J. Craig Fischenich, and John M. Nestler 
Beneficial Use Potential of Dry Weather Flow in the Las Vegas Valley, Nevada 
—  Steve A. Mizell and Richard H. French 
Biogeochemistry of an Old-Growth Forested Watershed, Olympic National Park, Washington 
—  Robert L. Edmonds, Ted B. Thomas, and Roger D. Blew 
Causes of Peak Flows in Northwestern Montana and Northeastern Idaho 
—  Lee H. MacDonald and James A. Hoffman 
Characteristics and Contributing Causes of an Abnormal Frequency of Flood-Producing 
Rainstorms at Chicago 
Chemical Analysis of COg Removal in Tray Aerators 
—  Enrique J. La Motta 
Climate, Snow Cover, Glaciers, and Runoff in the Tien Shan, Central Asia 
—  Vladimir B. Aizen, Elena M. Aizen, and John M. Melack 
Community Response to Stormwater Pollution in an Urbanized Watershed 
—  Martin M. Kaufman 
Comparative Evaluation of Land Cover Data Sources for Erosion Prediction 
—  Robert H. Fraser, Maureen V. Warren, and Paul K. Barten 
Comparison of Bank Erosion at Vegetated and Non-Vegetated Channel Bends 
—  C. E. Beeson and P. F. Doyle 
Comparison of the Magnitude of Erosion Along Two Large Regulated Rivers 
—  John C. Schmidt, Paul E. Grams, and Robert H. Webb 
Competing Water Uses in the Southwestern United States: Valuing Drought Damages 
—  James F. Booker and Bonnie G. Colby 
Control of Streambank Erosion Due to Bed Degradation With Vegetation and Structure 
—  FD. Shields, Jr., A. J. Bowie, and C. M. Cooper 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
TITLE INDEX TO VOLUME 31 — 1995 
Control of Suspended Solids and Phytoplankton with Fishes and a Mussel 
—  Louis A. Helfrich, Mark Zimmerman, and Diana L. Weigmann 
Coping With a Severe Sustained Drought on the Colorado River: Introduction and Overview 
—  Robert A. Young 
The Critical Role of “Unused” Resources 
—  Peter E. Black 
Design Basis for Everglades Stormwater Treatment Areas 
TL  Eo  ia ascsenidenbbinessineenilbbientiovenvennebeasiihiceaibepnenmpeeenteieseeveaveninneneid 671 
Developing and Implementing Decision Support Systems: A Critique and a Challenge 
—  Daniel P. Loucks 
Development of a Nondegradation Policy for High Quality Waters 
—  Richard A. Albert 
Differences Between Modeled Surplus and USGS-Measured Discharge in Lake Pontchartrain Basin, 
Louisiana 
—  Robert V. Rohli and John M. Grymes III 
Environmental Factors Influencing Suspended Solids in the Loxahatchee me Florida 
—  Jill M. Noel, Robert H. Chamberlain, and Alan D. Steinman 
Estimating Drainage Area on Steep Uniform Slopes 
—  Steven R. Abt, Christopher I. Thornton, and Terry L. Johnson 
Estimating Low-Flow Quantiles from Drainage-Basin Characteristics in New Hampshire 
and Vermont 
—  S. Lawrence Dingman and Stephen C. Lawlor 
Estimating Nonpoint Source Pollution Loads With a GIS Screening Model 
—  Christine L. Adamus and Martinus J. Bergman 
Estimation of Energy Requirements of Morning Dew Evaporation from Leaf Surfaces 
—  W. Abtew and J. Obeysekera 
Flow Duration Curves II: A Review of Applications in Water Resources Planning 
—  Richard M. Vogel and Neil M. Fennessey 
Frequency-Duration Analysis of Dissolved-Oxygen Concentrations in Two Southwestern 
Wisconsin Streams 
—  Steven R. Greb and David J. Graczyk 
A Gaming Evaluation of Colorado River Drought Management Institutional Options 
—  James L. Henderson and William B. Lord 
Geomorphic and Pedologic Influence on Small-Scale Ephemeral Channel Dimensions in 
Rangelands 
—  Heidi Wienert George and Roy C. Sidle 
Hydrodynamic Control of an Emergent Aquatic Plant (Scirpus acutus) in Open Channels 
—  David P. Groeneveld and Richard H. French 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
TITLE INDEX TO VOLUME 31 — 1995 
Hydrodynamic Modeling of the Carson River and Lahontan Reservoir, Nevada 
—  John L. Warwick and Kenneth J. Heim 
Hydrodynamic Simulations of a Constructed Wetland in South Florida 
—  Mariano Guardo and Richard S. Tomasello 
Hydrologic and Economic Impacts of Drought Under Alternative Policy Responses 
—  James F. Booker 
Hydrologic Scenarios for Severe Sustained Drought in the Southwestern United States 
—  David G. Tarboton 
Impact of Irrigation Wells on Baseflow of the Big Blue River, Nebraska 
—  M. Ali Tabidian and Darryll T. Pederson 
Impacts of a Severe Sustained Drought on Colorado River Water Resources 
—  Benjamin L. Harding, Taiye B. Sangoyomi, and Elizabeth A. Payton 
Influencing Water Legislative Development: What To Do and What To Avoid 
—  Ray Jay Davis, George William Sherk, and Donald Phelps 
Institutional Options for the Colorado River 
—  Douglas S. Kenney 
Integrated Water Management: Contending With Garbage Can Decisionmaking in 
Organized Anarchies 
—  Robert E. Deyle 
The Law of the Colorado River: Coping With Severe Sustained Drought 
—  Lawrence J. MacDonnell, David H. Getches, and William C. Hugenberg, Fr. .........cccccccceseeeesseeeeeeerenenseee 825 
The Levee Love Affair:  A Stormy Relationship? 
—  Graham A. Tobin 
Managing the Colorado River in a Severe Sustained Drought: An Evaluation of Institutional Options 
—  William B. Lord, James F. Booker, David M. Getches, Benjamin L. Harding, 
Douglas S. Kenney, and Robert A. Young 
Managing Underground Storage Tanks in Urban Environments: A Geographic Information 
Systems Approach 
—  Paul F. Hudak, Roger K. Speas, and F. Andrew Schoolmaster 
Measured and Predicted Velocity and Longitudinal Dispersion at Steady and Unsteady 
Flow, Colorado River, Glen Canyon Dam to Lake Mead 
Rio siletsnemnsneipidgunaseeendbininicaianangnadagiibinnenvenednsveniaanabsiniaatntesinies 265 
Meeting Future Public Water Supply Needs: A Southwest Perspective 
—  Thomas S. Maddock and Walter G. Hines 
Mitigating Impacts of a Severe Sustained Drought on Colorado River Water Resources 
—  Taiye B. Sangoyomi and Benjamin L. Harding 
Model Development for Conjunctive Use Study of the San Jacinto Basin, California 
—  Chuching Wang, Behrooz Mortazavi,  Wen-Kang Liang, Ne-Zheng Sun, and 
William W-G. Yeh 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
TITLE INDEX TO VOLUME 31 - 1995 
Morphology of Bedrock Step Pool Systems 
—  Don W. Duckson, Jr. and Linda J. Duckson 
New Directions in Floodplain Management 
i,  necting amnapncieenennplatisibanahenanensinandinenesaeetentonremncatsascneeneetanseooonoenates 351 
Nitrate Concentrations in Karst Springs in an Extensively Grazed Area 
—  D. G. Boyer and G. C. Pasquarell 
Nonpoint Source Pollution Potential in an Agricultural Watershed in Northwestern Pennsylvania 
—  Fred J. Brenner and James J. Mondok 
Raster-Based Hydrologic Modeling of Spatially-Varied Surface Runoff 
—  Pierre Y. Julien, Bahram Saghafian, and Fred L. Ogden 
Recovery of “Lost” Storm Water From Local Wash Beds 
—  C.H. Udall 
Regional Assessment of NLEAP NO;-N Leaching Indices 
—  B.K. Wylie, M. J. Shaffer, and M. D. Hall 
Regional Scale Trend Monitoring of Indicators of Trophic Condition of Lakes 
—  D.P. Larsen, N. S. Urquhart, and D. L. Kugler 
Rehabilitation of Watersheds With Incising Channels 
—  FD. Shields, Jr., S. S. Knight, and C. M. Cooper 
Relation Between Stream-Water Quality and Geohydrology During Base-Flow Conditions, 
Roberts Creek Watershed, Clayton County, Iowa 
—  Stephen J. Kalkhoff 
Review of Determination of Instream Flow Requirements With Special Application to Australia 
—  Khalid Karim, Maureen E. Gubbels, and Ian C. Goulter 
Revisiting the Degree-Day Method for Snowmelt Computations 
i  a  canteen  init eens  hcnbesigeetiellimeonesnen clbeetnstennienmainecantinintll 657 
Rural Nonpoint Source Pollution Control in Wisconsin: The Limits of a Voluntary Program? 
ce  gE  ETE  Eee:  ee  Le  ae  Se  oe  eee  en  ee 1009 
Seasonal Pumping Variation Effects on Wellhead Protection Area Delineation 
—  Tharacad S. Ramanarayanan, Daniel E. Storm, and Michael D. Smolen 
Sensitivity of a Prairie Wetland to Increased Temperature and Seasonal Precipitation Changes 
—  Karen A. Poiani, W. Carter Johnson, and Timothy G. F. Kittel 
Simulating Nitrogen Losses from Agricultural Land: Implications for Water Quality and 
Protection Policy 
—  Robert L. Parsons, James W. Pease, and Darrell J. Bosch 
Simulating Tile Drainage and Nitrate Leaching Under a Potato Crop 
—  Chandra A. Madramootoo, Kenneth A. W. Wiyo, and Peter Enright 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
TITLE INDEXT O VOLUME 31 — 1995 
Social Implications of Severe Sustained Drought: Case Studies in California and Colorado 
—  Richard S. Krannich, Sean P. Keenan, Michael S. Walker, and Donald L. Hardesty 
Discussion — “Soil Moisture Sensors for Continuous Monitoring,” by Saud A. Amer, 
Timothy O. Keefer, Mark A. Weltz, David C. Goodrich, and Leslie B. Bach 
—  Chittarajan Ray 
Reply — “Soil Moisture Sensors for Continuous Monitoring,” by Chittarajan Ray 
—  Saud A. Amer 
A Stepwise Procedure to Design Pluvial Drainage Systems in Agricultural Zones 
—  J. L. Sdnchez-Bribiesca,  O. A. Fuentes-Mariles, and J. Gracia-Sdnchez 
Stormwater Detention Basins and Residential Locational Decisions 
—  Carol Emmerling-DiNovo 
Technical Clarity in Inter-Agency Negotiations: Lessons from Four Hydropower Projects 
—  Nina Burkardt, Berton Lee Lamb, Jonathan G. Taylor, and Terry J. Waddle 
A Test of Several Evaporation Equations for Water Temperature Simulations in Lakes 
—  A. H. Rasmussen, M. Hondzo, and H. G. Stefan 
Tree-Ring Reconstruction of Upper Gila River Discharge 
—  David Meko and Donald A. Graybill 
The Tree-Ring Record of Severe Sustained Drought 
—  David Meko, Charles W. Stockton, and W. R. Boggess 
Uncertainty Analysis of BMP Effectiveness for Controlling Nitrogen from Urban Nonpoint 
Sources 
—  Carol B. Griffin 
Use of the Kriging Method for Studying Characteristics of Ground Water Droughts 
—  Tiao J. Chang and Choo B. Teoh 
Use and Misuse of Complex Models: Examples from Water Demand Management 
—  Michael Parker, James G. Thompson, Robert R. Reynolds, Jr., and Michael D. Smith 
Discussion — “Use of Pebble Counts to Evaluate Fine Sediment Increase in Stream Channels,” 
by John P. Potyondy and Terry Hardy 
TE  ee  a  ce  re 537 
Reply — “Use of Pebble Counts to Evaluate Fine Sediment Increase in Stream Channels,” 
by G. Mathias Kondolf 
—  John P. Potyondy and Terry Hardy 
Using Curve Numbers to Determine Baseline Values of Green-Ampt Effective Hydraulic 
Conductivities 
—  L. M. Risse, B. Y. Liu, and M. A. Nearing 
A Volume Balance Solution for Water Flow Over Flat Soil Surfaces 
—  Mariano Guardo 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
TITLE INDEX TO VOLUME 31 - 1995 
Water Markets  and Decentralized Water Resources Management: International Problems 
and Opportunities 
—  K. William Easter and Robert Hearne 
Water Quality Study of Graywater Treatment Systems 
—  Charles P. Gerba, Timothy M. Straub, Joan B. Rose, Martin M. Karpiscak, 
Kennith E. Foster, and Richard G. Brittain 
Watershed Analysis as  a Framework for Implementing Ecosystem Management 
—  David R. Montgomery, Gordon E. Grant, and Kathleen Sullivan 
Whither World Water? 
—  John C. Rodda 
Who Should Manage the High Plains Aquifer? The Irrigators’ Perspective 
—  Stephen E. White and David E. Kromm 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
AUTHOR INDEX TO VOLUME 31 - 1995 
Ss IIIIR TED, sninisitatennsitnndetaabinennsantgivstaditletesentliiel 53, 745  A  ee  447, 505 
I elcnncisneseatdlintitcimiamnnidliinaantapitiibindtisnisniiansedl 217  eres sees 199 
EE  ED  5  TS  a 647  Galloway, Jr., Gerald E 
ETE  CSE  ATP  i  SE  1113  eena e  Te 633 
Aizen, Vladimir B  George, Heidi Wienert 
Albert, Richard A.  a NINE  eiiieniiddsinscitncucnestnattanitednemsiliteitiheibiadeal 109 
Amer, Saud A.  ES  ea 825, 939 
Gillies, J. A. 
Barbé, Donald E  ae a ne, 1062 
Barten, Paul K.  SA eeE e es, MAE 199 
ES  De  983  CS  eeea e  431 
ING  scncsiatnenshicnnteititeninabidegebonnnsehietita 647  Graf, Julia Badal 
EE Se a  589  Grams, Paul E 
Blew, Roger D  i MINI, sccccccccstntunsdceetimtinnsnntsdiitlaasicnianinastinel 369 
STEIN cisnciecininnnnntsicsaiinentitctiiigainniitinthanandcatscnss 789  ee a  605 
EELA T TOES 877, 889, 939  TT  icncicrncctncencisecciseiitnecesshsnsctditinsiinmpiseatnadl 431 
ia  dciiasinnss neared tihideinannindiiaamriane  1079  ee MII s.ccdcinnonistsisptinnnnteciiionsennsidiiinetionsiblieintbiibadis 1041 
eeae. e S ee  475  EE  ESe e ee 505 
STING IDS diiacicnitltsbstiinnitiabentintinadicnddinndiiininiiiieapiahileidbizensaiicions 729  ID atdnsomadltbesincthineimecseenentiscnciicnnsael 97 
EEae  I  ee. OS 1101  Guardo, Mariano  687, 1089 
Brittain, Richard G  Bs SII Till ceccinteenneicintsonseassiccnnastiieiiientiaes 1062 
Burkardt, Nina 
SI FTEs Si iainc rceatnticennttizhstaninensaaennnnenepnegutviieaiinnistbioncilad 399 
IR IRI, i: nara citemncinenepsietinlonbllsonaisneaiindintie 21  BN ETD sctniriniccinetumatdanindinnsensssiitdininesell 851 
EERIE  EEE  eT  Oe  1001  815, 925, 939 
Cheama, Andres 
Colby, Bonnie G  a 867 
Cooper, C. M  Hearne, Robert 
Heim, Kenneth J 
Davis, Ray Jay  Helfrich, Louis A 
I  eniahdhesindesenscnterittevininuniinimasiiatnsseemntints 387  CS  ITa  eT 907 
I  Tila  cnssibtscshaadiil cmtvinnveniontbathinsiindbentisiseeniesesstees 33  |  TE  ee  OE  ED  EN 317 
Dingman, S. Lawrence  SE  EReC ey   Te 79 
YE  ER  ee  ot  983  TTI  sian  asniiads etntetsinabinndlabidaceniniibanddeiimeetie 1023 
TE AC  Ne a 43  ici  crisess litecrathiesicanenitieinildlinbasigtnnehaetiontel 439 
a icincithcaaiinla naitticadhasissatiietihinonansdeinientetnianed 43  Huff, Floyd A 
Hugenberg, Jr., William C 
Easter, K. William 
TT  hn ncscsehithdinlnniinbnedacnibenmmenennanid 409  EN I TI scicsinsincenditnensnsncestinnensennnasiiidanlissiteiinandiii 53 
Emmerling-DiNovo, Carol  Johnson, W. Carter 
Enright, Peter  EESN   Oe om  me 523 
Fennessey, Neil M  I  cd es neni geinnstmansimniiahimnenaeiniadioel 593 
Fischenick, J. Craig  Karim, Khalid 
I  lla cecal 109  ITI Es ccnnssesscniinesbonsinenneeinenseersuntiniinens 109 
Francis, John C  EESe e  491 
EE  a  aa ee 991  RE  EE  eon  Oe  Oe  ee 851 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
AUTHOR INDEX TO VOLUME 31 — 1995 
Kenney, Douglas S. ................:ssesscseeeeeeeeeereees 837, 939  Poiani, Karen A. 
II TIE, 0 sicctnnscnninestsistadecocennibodeinestonneresis 283  EC 539 
I  cdiattinndatactcininntbaccendnilincnsistiitniestiiinegubtbinocee 971 
Kondolf, G. Mathias  Ramanarayanan, Tharacad S. ...................sseeeeeeeeees 421 
Krammich, Richard 8S.’ .............cccccccccossccscssessscesesseeees 851  Rango, Al 
EEEee e en See 715  Rasmussen, A. H 
EY  EY  Se  a  eee  See 117  Ray, Chittarajan 
Reynolds, Jr., Robert R. .............::sccceesscceseseeeeeeeseeeees 257 
Laahty, Vanissa 
Lalio, Sheldon  See oS ee  1 
INN, <ccscshicncccnsccotdiitsnncssnenatituonsionsses 207  EELTS  A    T 97 
Lamb, Berton Lee  Rose, Joan B 
8  a San.  eee 117 
SE a  ee 243  Saghafian, Bahram 
Liang, Wen-Kang  Sadnchez-Bribiesca, J. L. ...............0ssssseseseesssssssonseece 199 
kT  A  re  ane  eee  Ee” 147  Sangoyomi, Taiye B. ................:.:scsccsssecesseeeeees 815, 925 
Lord, William B  907, 939  Schmidt, John C 
ETee  571  Schoolmaster, F. Andrew 
Shaffer, M. J 
I  i  ctrltnetninsneiaiieiili 79  Sherk, George William 
MacDonnell, Lawrence J. ..............ccccssceecceeeeeeeeseeeees 825  EE  ET SORE 475, 971 
Maddock, Thomas S  III  iisinininstusiiaseredadeiapebasantiiecighhentiensniinuniaatabte 1051 
Madramootoo, Chandra A. ............c.ccseceeeeseeeseeeeeeees 463  Ie 257 
AS  ET,  SE  TS  657  Smolen, Michael D 
Meko, David  605, 789  Speas, Roger K. 
ES ee: sere 1113  Stefan, H. G 
Mizell, Steve A.  TI  sid acncliaadiiceanidibinaiinnanidll 21 
CS  TAP EC 1101  Bs MINED IE visccecsnciumensnonisnnieniseshivdiibensninilians 789 
Montgomery, David R. .................scssccssesecessesseeeceeeees 369  ETT: LE  OE 421 
Mortazavi, Behrooz  II cicccicsitil i  wnat ceinaniapsisitntscnisitniniiiieiias 109 
Sullivan, Kathleen 
Sun, Ne-Zheng 
Tabidian, M. Ali 
Tarboton, David G 
Obeysekera, J  INN GID ahipcisinstinccenintnonscstunteitidinnstnshastbint 187 
EE Seee ee  eT  523  ITI  css eatitninaiiinntibicneimiinnsdmemplbesdenciitnadiins 1001 
EER  INS TN  renee  nn  See  aren  Y 409 
Parker, Michael  I, CG Go ccc cesinccnrssvensenincsitintivnrniigeticisicinnenl 257 
Cee ae 1079  Tesoreibem, Coepiatniner L. ...........cccsccccesrcrecsesssevecsnseves 53 
RES  I  ee  TT: 729  Tobin, Graham A. 
III  scr ceseeencveniinnsintsisatednseenestunstinai 815  II EE sabes tknscsniesniiidecnitetnitinectictdiindial 687 
EES  ER  a  eee 1079 
ET Tis essicisccsehnasineesnagaenesenpebisiaaeensil 295  SE  citcei asipscepusinatbegsaibiceeninesitipiiepinheniiciantadaslid 737 
I I  Kissa sicnenetidgnnnsantanbsitibindetinkestibianients 745  I TINA Ty ickinsnnstnnatenestiinuieunsnediibidianannactdestasdaiaidl 117 
Phelps, Donald 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN
AUTHOR INDEX TO VOLUME 31 — 1995 
Vogel, Richard M 
IT  iti itesntieshnenectianciliuntemenanipiniicnsnctinng 187 
er 851 
Walker, Jr., William W. ...................:.ccccceseeeseeeeeeeeneee 671 
Wang, Chuching 
TS  EE  ee  ee  en  67 
|  TER  LEE  FAA  745 
|  EELaS   617 
Torre  tts sentcenciinnsiniiiaenesteteneseneinel 307 
Be INA, Wi chtcinsanissnihtincintnascnepnesossenmnenernnet 463 
ES 715 
SIIIIIIIN T. csidl einenG ibissianththiphatnsntnanitinacanbanectnnen 1009 
Yeh, William W-G 
Young, Robert A. 
Zimmerman, Mark 
WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN