Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections
Personal tools
You are here: Home / Practitioners (individuals) / Maloney, Lori

Search results

310 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type


















New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Person Federico, Christopher
Located in Practitioners (individuals)
Image Octet Stream Fin clip from Salt Spring Run, PA
A fin clip taken for genetic research, from a brook trout in Salt Spring Run, PA
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Wild Brook Trout Image Gallery
Image PNG image Fink
Brad Fink photo
Located in About EBTJV
Provides cost-share and design expertise to landowners to remove unwanted dams and replace culverts.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
DEP strives to assist Pennsylvania communities experiencing the damage and disruption that flooding can cause. This webpage contains resources to help municipal officials, property owners, and others affected by flooding of local streams to better understand the regulatory requirements that apply to working in streams. When stream maintenance work is performed in a well-planned, environmentally responsible manner, the likelihood of future problems is reduced.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Image JPEG image Fly fishing on Seneca Creek
By Dave Kazyak
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout
Forests for Fish Workshop
Franklin Land Trust and MA Woodlands Institute are partnering with Trout Unlimited to host a workshop demonstrating stream restoration techniques for native fisheries habitat. This event will help people in the Deerfield River Watershed region learn more about native fish, habitat restoration and climate resilience.
Located in News & Events / Events / Upload New Events
File Friends of Winooski River completion report 2022
Friends of the Winooski River completed the removal of Camp Wihakowi Dam in Northfield, Vermont in October 2020. The circa 1920 dam was causing flooding upstream and sediment pollution downstream. Complete removal of the dam resulted in impressive gains: it reconnected 6 miles of Bull Run and an additional 21 miles of upstream habitat, allowed the stream to once again access the larger floodplain, and protected downstream habitat from the smothering effects of sedimentation. But of course, a dam removal project doesn't stop when the stone and concrete has been removed. To improve recovery and stabilization, project partners performed additional work on the pedestrian bridge, access road, and former pool area in 2021. Monitoring shows the river is free flowing, sediment transport has been naturalized, the restored floodplains are successfully vegetating, and habitat has been improved. According to EBTJV's calculations, the project brought an estimated $14.6M in socioeconomic benefits.
Located in Projects / Project Completion Reports
Video From the Field: Linking Land and Water in Brook Trout Conservation from Chesapeake Bay Program
Check out this great video that the Chesapeake Bay Program produced showcasing a brook trout restoration project in West Virginia.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Brook Trout Video and Webinar Gallery
Video From the Field: Tagged brook trout reveal the pristine health of Maryland’s Savage River
April 2012: Follow biologists as they track native brook trout in western Maryland's Savage River, and learn why these fish are used to monitor the health of the freshwater streams that flow to the Chesapeake Bay.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Brook Trout Video and Webinar Gallery