520 results — topic: Alpine & Subalpine Ecology
Components of Phenotypic Selection: pollen export and flower corolla width in Ipomopsis aggregata
Diane R. Campbell, Nickolas M. Waser, Mary V. Price, Elizabeth A. Lynch, Randall J. Mitchell, Components of Phenotypic Selection: Pollen Export and Flower Corolla Width in Ipomopsis aggregata, Evolution, Vol. 45, No. 6 (Sep., 1991), pp. 1458-1467
The importance of interannual variation and bottom-up nitrogen enrichment for plant-pollinator networks
Striking changes in food web structure occur with alterations in resource supply. Like predator–prey interactions, many mutualisms are also consumer–resource interactions. However, no studies have explored how the structure of plant–pollinator networks may be affected by nutrient enrichment. For thr
Thermoregulatory significance of wing melanization in Pieris butterflies (Lepidoptera; Pieridae): physics, posture, and pattern
Model and experimental results suggest that, in certain wing regions, increased melanization can reduce body temperature in Pieris; this effect of melanization is exactly the opposite of that found in other Pierid butterflies that use their wings as solar absorbers.
Crucial nesting habitat for gunnison sage‐grouse: A spatially explicit hierarchical approach
AbstractGunnison sage‐grouse (Centrocercus minimus) is a species of special concern and is currently considered a candidate species under Endangered Species Act. Careful management is therefore required to ensure that suitable habitat is maintained, particularly because much of the species' current
Assessing the causes and scales of the leaf economics spectrum using venation networks in <i>Populus tremuloides</i>
Summary The leaf economics spectrum (LES) describes global interspecific correlations between leaf traits. Despite recent theoretical advances, the biological scale at which LES correlations emerge and the physiological and climatic causes of these correlations remains partially unknown. Here, we te
The population ecology of a natural population of the pierid butterfly Colias alexandra
Key factor analysis techniques were used to examine factors determining the abundance of a population of non-pest Colias, finding factors resulting in reduced natality and mortality during larval diapause determine the population trends for C. alexandra.
Diel feeding and positioning periodicity of a grazing mayfly in a trout stream and a fishless stream
We studied the feeding and positioning periodicity on natural substrates of the overwintering and fast-growing summer generations of a grazing mayfly, Baetis bicaudatus, in a third-order trout stream and a fishless, first-order tributary in western Colorado. At 4-h intervals over 24-h, we recorded t
Power-laws and snow avalanches
This paper presents evidence of frequency‐size power‐laws in several groups of snow avalanche paths. Other natural hazards, such as earthquakes and forest fires, exhibit similar power‐law relationships. In addition, an analysis of the response of one group of snow avalanche paths to storms through t
The breeding systems of six species of <i>Arabis</i> (Brassicaceae)
The ability of organisms to produce genetic variation for any trait, including resistance to pathogens, is partially determined by breeding system. I used enzyme electrophoresis, crossing experiments, and cytology to assess the breeding systems of cooccurring Arabis species that are often infected b
Community composition in mountain ecosystems: climatic determinants of montane butterfly distributions
Carol L. Boggs, Dennis D. Murphy, Community Composition in Mountain Ecosystems: Climatic Determinants of Montane Butterfly Distributions, Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters, Vol. 6, No. 1, Mountain Ecology: Organism Responses to Environmental Change (Jan., 1997), pp. 39-48
Context-dependent pollinator behavior: An explanation for patterns of hybridization among three species of Indian paintbrush
In some areas of sympatry, reproductively compatible plant species hybridize, but in other areas of sympatry, they do not and they remain reproductively isolated from one another. Explanations offered to explain patterns of hybridization that vary by population have usually focused on genetic or env
Dawsonite in the Green River Formation of Colorado
Dawsonite (NaAl (OH) 2 CO 3 ) is relatively abundant (up to 25 percent) as a rock-forming constituent of a zone within the Green River oil shales in the Piceance Creek Basin, Colorado, and also occurs in Pleistocene ash beds, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. The mineral is most readily distinguished from ot
Alarm calling in yellow-bellied marmots: II. The importance of direct fitness
Alarm calling in group-living yellow-bellied marmots is a form of direct parental care and inclusive fitness, broadly defined, is of little importance for the maintenance of alarm calling.
Reproductive strategies of yellow-bellied marmots: energy conservation and differences between the sexes
Yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota jlaviventris) conserve maintenance energy by reducing resting metabolic rate, decreasing conductance, avoiding thermal stress, by an annual cycle of metabolism, and by reducing metabolic rate and conductance following the mid summer molt. Male reproductive strategies
Epidote phenocrysts in dacitic dikes, Boulder County, Colorado
Optimal foraging: random movement by pollen collecting bumblebees
The data indicate that bumblebees exhibit great plasticity in foraging behavior and that they are able to forage efficiently under a wide range of environmental conditions.
Systematic increase in pollen carryover and its consequences for geitonogamy in plant populations
W. F. Morris, M. V. Price, N. M. Waser, J. D. Thomson, B. Thomson, D. A. Stratton, Systematic Increase in Pollen Carryover and Its Consequences for Geitonogamy in Plant Populations, Oikos, Vol. 71, No. 3 (Dec., 1994), pp. 431-440
Floral dimorphism, pollination, and self-fertilization in gynodioecious <i>Geranium richardsonii</i> (Geraniaceae)
The selective maintenance of gynodioecy depends on the relative fitness of the male‐sterile (female) and hermaphroditic morphs. Females may compensate for their loss of male fitness by reallocating resources from male function (pollen production and pollinator attraction) to female function (seeds a
Relative success of self and outcross pollen comparing mixed- and single-donor pollinations in <i>Aquilegia caerulea</i>
Flowers frequently receive both self (S) and outcross (OC) pollen, but S pollen often sires proportionally fewer seeds. Failure of S pollen can reflect evolved mechanisms that promote outcrossing and/or inbreeding depression expressed during seed development. The relative importance of these two pro
Caddisfly life histories along permanence gradients in high-altitude wetlands in Colorado (U.S.A.)
SUMMARY1. Larvae of cased caddisflies (Limnephilidae and Phryganeidae) are among the most abundant and conspicuous invertebrates in northern wetlands. Although species replacements are often observed along permanence gradients, the underlying causal mechanisms are poorly understood. In this paper, w
