365 results — type: Journal Article
Student Paper
Observing the effects of a nectar-inhabiting bacterium, Pantoea sp., and nectar robbing on male fitness in Ipomopsis aggregata
Article
Herbivory and water availability interact to shape the adaptive landscape in the perennial forb, Boechera stricta
Article
Responses to climate change – insights and limitations from herbaceous plant model species
Article
Increased temperature and CO2 induce plasticity and impose novel selection on plant traits
Article
Increasing aridity may threaten the maintenance of a plant defence polymorphism
Article
Phylogeny does not predict the outcome of heterospecific pollen–pistil interactions in a species-rich alpine plant community
Student Paper
Temperature and relative humidity effects on nectar quantity, nectar quality, and plant-pollinator interactions
Student Paper
Testing the marginal value theorem on Bombus appositus and Bombus nevadensis
Article
Effects of experimental warming on floral scent, display and rewards in two subalpine herbs
Article
Predicting the contribution of single trait evolution to rescuing a plant population from demographic impacts of climate change
Student Paper
The effects of snowmelt date, soil moisture, and precipitation on nectar and floral morphology of Ipomopsis
Article
Adaptation and gene flow are insufficient to rescue a montane plant under climate change
Student Paper
Biotic and abiotic drivers of pathogen prevalence in a rust fungus with multiple plant hosts
Article
Natural selection on floral volatiles and other traits can change with snowmelt timing and summer precipitation
Article
The hole truth: why do bumble bees rob flowers more than once?
Article
Sodium enriched nectar shapes plant–pollinator interactions in a subalpine meadow
Thesis
Interpopulation variation and optimal mating in the perennial herb, Polemonium brandegeei
Article
Elevated [CO2] and temperature augment gas exchange and shift the fitness landscape in a montane forb
Article
Consequences of pollen defense compounds for pollinators and antagonists in a pollen rewarding plant
Student Paper
