265 results — topic: Snow & Ice
Article
Interactions between bee foraging and floral resource phenology shape bee populations and communities
Article
Interaction rewiring and the rapid turnover of plant-pollinator networks
Student Paper
Does it stay or does it go: exploring seasonal influences on nutrients across topography in a Colorado mountain watershed
Article
Delving deeper: Questioning the decline of long-tongued bumble bees, long-tubed flowers and their mutualisms with climate change
Article
Effects of climate change on phenologies and distributions of bumble bees and the plants they visit
Article
Niche partitioning due to adaptive foraging reverses effects of nestedness and connectance on pollination network stability
Article
The fingerprints of global climate change on insect populations
Article
Pollinator specialization: from the individual to the community
Article
Asteraceae pollen provisions protect <i>Osmia</i> mason bees (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) from brood parasitism
Student Paper
Do bees show response diversity to environmental variables in a montane ecosystem?
Student Paper
Assessing pollinators’ contribution to the reproductive success of <i>Mertensia ciliata</i>
Student Paper
Impacts of early snow removal and frost on the reproductive success of <i>Delphinium nuttallianum</i>
Student Paper
Effects of <i>Helianthella quinquenervis</i> Extrafloral Nectaries on Ant Abundance and Community Structure
Thesis
Temporal ecology of a subalpine ecosystem: Plant communities, plant-pollinator interactions, & climate change.
Student Paper
Correlation of leaf and community traits and various spectra in meadows along an elevation gradient
Article
Phenological change in a spring ephemeral: implications for pollination and plant fitness
Thesis
Competitive context drives pollinator behavior: linking foraging plasticity, natural pollen deposition, and plant reproduction.
Thesis
Nesting aggregation as a determinant of brood parasitism in mason bees (<i>Osmia</i> spp.)
Student Paper
Use of Low Quality Pollen by Asteraceae-Specialist Osmia Mason Bees (<i>Hymenoptera: Megachilidae</i>)
Student Paper
