388 results — topic: Vertebrate Biology
Migration Corridors (WGFD Designated) of Mule Deer in the Platte Valley Herd in Wyoming
The Platte Valley Herd Corridor was designated by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department in 2018 (fig. 30). The Platte Valley herd contains approximately 11,000 mule deer. The corridor is based on two wintering populations, including a south segment from Saratoga, Wyoming, to the Colorado State line,
Migration Stopovers (WGFD) of Mule Deer in the Platte Valley Herd in Wyoming
The Platte Valley Herd Corridor was designated by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department in 2018 (fig. 30). The Platte Valley herd contains approximately 11,000 mule deer. The corridor is based on two wintering populations, including a south segment from Saratoga, Wyoming, to the Colorado State line,
Data for Context-dependent biotic interactions control plant abundance across altitudinal environmental gradients, 2014, 2016, Colorado, USA
Many biotic interactions influence community structure, yet most distribution models for plants have focused on plant competition or used only abiotic variables to predict plant abundance. Furthermore, biotic interactions are commonly context-dependent across abiotic gradients. For example, plant-pl
Pocket gopher (<i>Thomomys talpoides</i>) soil disturbance peaks at mid-elevation and is associated with air temperature, forb cover, and plant diversity
Burrowing mammals can be ecosystem engineers by increasing soil aeration and erosion and altering the structure of plant communities. Studies that characterize the constraints on the distributions of fossorial mammal disturbances to soil can help predict changes in ecosystem engineering under future
Heartwood decay and vertical distribution of red-naped sapsucker nest cavities
The Birds of North America
The predation impact of <i>Tamiasciurus hudsonicus</i> on nest site selection
Camp Bird Mine Ouray County, Colorado
The impact of artificially creating an elk wintering ground on plant species diversity
Physiology of Cold Adaptation in Birds
Survey of Reproducing Populations Containing Neotenic Morphs of the Salamander, <i>Ambystoma Tigrinum nebulosum</i>, in the Gunnison Basin of Colorado
Testing the 'mimicry' explanation for the Colias 'alba' polymorphism: platability of Colias and other butterflies to wild bird predators
C. Ley, W. B. Watt, Testing the `Mimicry' Explanation for the Colias `alba' Polymorphism: Palatability of Colias and Other Butterflies to Wild Bird Predators, Functional Ecology, Vol. 3, No. 2 (1989), pp. 183-192
Possible effects of acidic deposition on a Rocky Mountain population of the tiger salamander <i>Ambystoma tigrinum</i>
Abstract: To investigate possible biological effects of acidic deposition in the western United States, we performed population censuses and dose‐response experiments at a subalpine watershed in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, An adult tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum nebulosum) population decl
