7,660 results

Dataset

Data-model files associated with the manuscript "The Effects of Spatial and Temporal Resolution of Gridded Meteorological Forcing on Watershed Hydrological Responses"

This data package contains the model inputs and outputs used in "The Effects of Spatial and Temporal Resolution of Gridded Meteorological Forcing on Watershed Hydrological Responses" (Shuai et al., 2022 HESS). The data.zip file contains the data used to drive the model simulations. The model.zip fil

Shuai, P, Chen, X, Mital, U2022DOI: 10.15485/1861432
Dataset

Floodplain hydrostratigraphy from sedimentology, geophysics, and remote sensing

This file includes the data published in: Malenda, H.F., Sutfin, N.A., Stauffer, S., Guryan. G., Rowland, J.C., Williams, K.H., and Singha, K. (2019). From Grain to Floodplain: Evaluating heterogeneity of floodplain hydrostatigraphy using sedimentology, geophysics, and remote sensing. Earth Surface

Malenda, H, Singha, K, Randall, J2022DOI: 10.4211/hs.394a6900a0bd4911b642f9ba94046780Cited 1 times
Dataset

Aspen ploidy level and cover maps from NEON Airborne Observation Platform, 2018, Crested Butte, Colorado

Maps of aspen ploidy (diploid or triploid) developed using National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) Airborne Observation Platform visible to shortwave infrared imaging spectroscopy data that were acquired over the Upper East River, Colorado in 2018. Maps of aspen distribution, as well as other

Philip G. Brodrick, K. Dana Chadwick, Benjamin Blonder2022DOI: 10.15485/1779716
Dataset

QA/QC-ed Groundwater Level Time Series in PLM-1 and PLM-6 Monitoring Wells, East River, Colorado

Performed Quality Assurance and Quality Control (QA/QC) analysis of measured groundwater levels in monitoring wells PLM-1 and PLM-6, including identification and flagging of duplicated values of timestamps, gap filling of missing timestamps and water levels, removal of abnormal/bad and outliers of m

Faybishenko, B, Versteeg, R2022DOI: 10.15485/1866836
Article

Polyploidy in Indian paintbrush (<i>Castilleja</i>; Orobanchaccae) species shapes but does not prevent gene flow across species boundaries

• Premise of study: A difference in chromosome numbers (ploidy variation) between species is usually considered a major barrier to gene flow. Therefore, it is surprising that little is known about whether ploidy variation, both within and among species, influences spatial patterns of interspecific h

Hersch-Green E. I.2012American Journal of BotanyDOI: 10.3732/ajb.1200253Cited 23 times
Article

The indirect consequences of a mutualism: comparing positive and negative components of the net interaction between honeydew-tending ants and host plants

Grinath J. B., Inouye B. D., Underwood N.2012Journal of Animal Ecology
Article

The effect of ants on the population dynamics of a protective symbiont of aphids, <i>Hamiltonella defensa</i>

Abstract Mutualists that provide redundant services to the same organism have been shown both to coexist and compete for access to the partner. Aphids, for example, are known to receive protection against natural enemies from both heritable bacterial symbionts as well as ants, which tend aphids in e

Erickson D. M., Wood E. A., Oliver K. M.2012Annals of Entomological Society of AmericaDOI: 10.1603/an11176
Article

Large-scale manipulation of mayfly recruitment affects population size

Encalada A. C., Peckarsky B. L.2012Oecologia
Article

Plot-scale evidence of tundra vegetation change and links to recent summer warming

Elmendorf S. C., Henry G. H. R., Hollister R. D.2012Nature Climate ChangeDOI: 10.1038/nclimate1465Cited 978 times
Article

Global assessment of experimental Climate warming on tundra vegetation: heterogeneity over space and time

Sarah C. Elmendorf,1* Gregory H. R. Understanding the sensitivity of tundra vegetation to climate warming is critical to forecasting future Henry,1 Robert D. Hollister,2 Robert G. biodiversity and vegetation feedbacks to climate. In situ warming experiments accelerate climate change on a Björk,3 An

Elmendorf S. C., Henry G. H. R., Hollister R. D.2012Ecology Letters
Article

Forecasting phenology: from species variability to community forecasts

Diez J. M., Miller-Rushing A. J., Mazer S. J.2012Ecology Letters
Article

The shape of a species\\\' spatial abundance distribution

ABSTRACTAim The shape of a species' spatial abundance distribution may change with spatial scale. We predict that the shape will typically change from strictly downward‐sloping (falling) to humped (rising then falling) as the spatial scale increases. The prediction, motivated in part by central limi

Conlisk J., Conlisk E., Kassim A. R.2012Global Ecology and BiogeographyDOI: 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2011.00755.xCited 16 times
Article

Mule deer (<i>Odocoileus hemionus</i>) respond to yellow-bellied marmot (<i>Marmota flaviventris</i>) alarm calls

Individuals may obtain valuable information about the presence of predators by eavesdropping on heterospecific alarm signals. While playback studies have demonstrated that similarly-sized and taxonomically-related species may respond to the calls of each other, less work has been done to define the

Carrasco M. F., Blumstein D. T.2012Ethology
Article

When resources don't rescue: flowering phenology and species interactions affect compensation to herbivory in <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i>

The ability of plants to tolerate, or compensate for, herbivore damage is highly variable and has been the subject of much research. Although many plants can compensate for herbivore damage, and some even overcompensate, we cannot yet generalize about the conditions that promote a positive response

Brody A. K., Irwin R. E.2012OikosDOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2012.20458.xCited 33 times
Article

Iron is not responsible for <i>Didymosphenia geminata</i> bloom formation in phosphorus-poor rivers

Blooms of the river benthic diatom Didymosphenia geminata are an enigma because they occur under phosphorus-poor conditions. A recent proposal that ferric–ferrous iron redox shifts sequester the additional phosphorus needed to stimulate and sustain D. geminata blooms does not agree with published ex

Bothwell M. L., Kilroy C., Taylor B. W.2012Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic SciencesDOI: 10.1139/f2012-112Cited 22 times
Article

A single climate driver has direct and indirect effects on insect population dynamics

Carol L. Boggs1,2* and David W. Weather drives population dynamics directly, through effects on vital rates, or indirectly, through effects on the Inouye1,3 populationÕs competitors, predators or prey and thence on vital rates. Indirect effects may include non-additive 1 Rocky Mountain Biological in

Boggs C. L., Inouye D. W.2012Ecology LettersDOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2012.01766.xCited 177 times
Document

Water Rights 2001- Part 1

Author: Butch E Clark Date: 2001 ? Gunnison, Durango, Colorado Spring, Denver Water, Rocky Ford, Ditches, Allocation, Conservation, Front Range, Western Slope, San Luis Valley

2001gunnison_basinupper_gunnison
Document

Survey results for End of Season Production Reports Field Crops Fruit Crops Vegetable Crops and Livestock Inventory Reports Cattle and Calves Sheep and Lambs Hogs and Pigs All Chickenes

R. Renee Liles. USDA/National Agricultural Statistics Service and Colorado Agricultural Statistics Service. February 23, 2001.

2001
Document

Statement of Mr. H. William Hochheiser Manager, Oil and Gas Environmental Research Office Office of Fossil Energy U.S. Department of Energy Before the Senate Committee on Appropriations Senate Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Subcommittee U.S. Senate Field Hearing on Coalbed Methane

H. William Hochheiser. US DOE. March 10, 2001.

2001
Document

Shrubland Ecosystem Genetics And Biodiversity: Proceedings

E.Durant MacAurthur, Daniel J. Fairbanks. 2001 ?

2001