619 results — topic: Flowering & Pollination

Article

Kinship, reproductive strategies, and social dynamics of yellow-bellied marmots

Social behavior of yellow-bellied marmots was observed for three years in colonies where kinship was known and for one year in a high elevation colony where harems were contiguous, indicating that reproductive strategies limit nepotism.

1982Behavioral EcologyDOI: 10.1007/bf00297667Cited 58 times
Article

Bumblebee foraging responses to variation in floral scent and color in snapdragons (Antirrhinum: Scrophulariaceae)

We examined the roles of floral scent and color in attracting bumblebees (Bombus spp.) to snapdragon flowers (Antirrhinum, Sonnet cultivar). Corolla color differences covaried with differences in floral scent emissions in two inbred lines of snapdragon. White-flowered plants emitted methyl cinnamate

1999American Midland NaturalistDOI: 10.1674/0003-0031(1999)142[0257:bfrtvi]2.0.co;2Cited 58 times
Article

<i>In situ</i> photosynthetic freezing tolerance for plants exposed to a global warming manipulation in the Rocky Mountains, Colorado, USA

• This research tested the hypothesis that experimental infrared warming will reduce photosynthesis for the evergreen shrub Artemisia tridentata and the subalpine, herbaceous Erythronium grandiflorum exposed to an in situ experimental freezing event during the spring snowmelt period. • Photosyntheti

2004New PhytologistDOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2004.01002.xCited 58 times
Article

Pollen discounting in Erythronium grandiflorum: mass-action estimates from pollen transfer dynamics

Pollen discounting, a reduction in success as an outcross pollen parent as a result of selfing, can reduce or eliminate the reproductive advantage commonly attributed to selfing. Previous estimates of pollen discounting have been based on segregation analysis of progeny from open-pollinated plants.

1994American NaturalistDOI: 10.1086/285707Cited 58 times
Article

Hawkmoths and the geographic patterns of floral variation in Aquilegia caerulea

1981EvolutionDOI: 10.2307/2408246Cited 58 times
Article

Mechanistic constraints and optimality models: thermoregulatory strategies in Colias butterflies

To explore mechanistic constraints on the evolution of optimal phenotypes, we develop an optimality model for thermoregulation in Colias butterflies. The model identifies the thermoregulatory characteristics of butterflies that maximize time available for flight activity subject to an overheating co

1984EcologyDOI: 10.2307/1937780Cited 58 times
Article

Assessing science training programs: Structured undergraduate research programs make a difference

Training in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) is a top priority for driving economic growth and maintaining technological competitiveness. We propose that exposure to a rigorous research program as an undergraduate leads to success in a research STEM career. We compared the sc

2018BioScienceDOI: 10.1093/biosci/biy052Cited 58 times
Article

Aerobic and anaerobic energy expenditure during rest and activity in montane Bufo b. boreas and Rana pipiens

Standard metabolic rates of both species are more thermally dependent than comparable values for lowland relatives and thermal sensitivity of physiological functions may have distinct advantages over thermally compensated rates in the short growing season and daily thermal fluctuations of the montan

1979OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/bf00348070Cited 58 times
Article

Responses of subalpine meadow vegetation to four years of experimental warming

Ecosystems at high elevations may be especially sensitive to global warming, because productivity is limited to a snow-free growing season, and warming is expected to cause earlier snowmelt. Here we report on vegetation responses to experimental warming in a subalpine meadow in the Colorado Rocky Mo

2000Ecological ApplicationsDOI: 10.1890/1051-0761(2000)010[0811:rosmvt]2.0.co;2Cited 58 times
Article

Transgenerational and within-generation plasticity in response to climate change: insights from a manipulative field experiment across an elevational gradient

Parental environmental effects-or transgenerational plasticity-can influence an individual's phenotype or fitness yet remain underexplored in the context of global change. Using the perennial self-pollinating plant Boechera stricta, we explored the effects of climate change on transgenerational and

2018Am. Nat.DOI: 10.1086/700097Cited 58 times
Article

Mayfly cerci as defense against stonefly predation: deflection and detection

In situ behavioral experiments were conducted in flow-through observation boxes in a Colorado and a New York stream to compare and contrast the cercal responses of Ephemerellidae and Baetidae mayflies to predaceous stoneflies. Ephemerella infrequens (Colorado) exhibited primarily a posture when touc

1987OikosDOI: 10.2307/3565851Cited 58 times
Article

Climate variability slows evolutionary responses of <i>Colias</i> butterflies to recent climate change

How does recent climate warming and climate variability alter fitness, phenotypic selection and evolution in natural populations? We combine biophysical, demographic and evolutionary models with recent climate data to address this question for the subalpine and alpine butterfly, Colias meadii , in t

2015Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological SciencesDOI: 10.1098/rspb.2014.2470Cited 58 times
Article

Subalpine forest carbon cycling: Short- and long-term influence of climate and species

Ecosystem carbon cycle feedbacks to climate change comprise one of the largest remaining sources of uncertainty in global model predictions of future climate. Both direct climate effects on carbon cycling and indirect effects via climate-induced shifts in species composition may alter ecosystem carb

2005Ecological ApplicationsDOI: 10.1890/04-1769Cited 57 times
Article

Adaptation at specific loci. V. Metabolically adjacent enzyme loci may have very distinct experiences of selective pressures

Abstract The polymorphic phosphoglucomutase (PGM) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) loci have been studied in parallel to experimental work on the phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI) polymorphism in Colias butterflies. PGI, PGM and G6PD are also autosomal in Colias. PGM and G6PD are loosely li

1988GeneticsDOI: 10.1093/genetics/119.4.913Cited 57 times
Article

Factors affecting corticosteroid concentrations in yellow-bellied marmots

There was no consistent relationship between measures of population density and concentrations of corticosteroids; when a significant relationship occurred, only 22-34% of the variation was explained.

1991Comparative Biochemistry and PhysiologyDOI: 10.1016/0300-9629(91)90576-xCited 57 times
Article

Influence of local demography on asymptotic and transient dynamics of a yellow-bellied marmot metapopulation

Despite recent advances in biodemography and metapopulation ecology, we still have limited understanding of how local demographic parameters influence short- and long-term metapopulation dynamics. We used long-term data from 17 local populations, along with the recently developed methods of matrix m

2009American NaturalistDOI: 10.1086/597225Cited 57 times
Article

A trait-based approach to the evolution of complex coalitions in male mammals

Coalitions occur when multiple individuals cooperate against a common opponent or for a common goal. Coalition formation is a complex behavior, typically described in highly social and cognitively complex species. Surprisingly, we know little about the social and environmental factors that may selec

2009Behavioral EcologyDOI: 10.1093/beheco/arp040Cited 56 times
Article

Stonefly nymphs hydrodynamic cues to discriminate between prey

This study is the first to document the use of hydrodynamic cues by stream-dwelling predators for discrimination of prey from nonprey and provides a mechanism to explain selective predation by stoneflies on Baetis in nature.

1989OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/bf00388487Cited 56 times
Article

Climate change and the conservation of marmots

Conservation of marmots, large ground-dwelling squirrels restricted to the northern hemisphere, was impacted by direct human activity through hunting or modifying ecosystem dynamics. Regulating human activities reduced the threat of extinction. Climate change, an indirect human impact, threatens mar

2013Natural ScienceDOI: 10.4236/ns.2013.55a005Cited 56 times
Article

Small pterosaurs and dinosaurs from the Uncompahgre fauna (Brushy Basin Member, Morrison Formation: ?Tithonian), Late Jurassic, western Colorado

Small vertebrates were recovered from the matrix encasing specimens of giant sauropod dinosaurs (Supersaurus, Ultrasaurus, Dystylosaurus) collected from the “Dry Mesa” Quarry (Brushy Basin Member, Morrison Formation, western Colorado). Most of the remains appear to pertain to a single form of pterod

1989Journal of PaleontologyDOI: 10.1017/s0022336000019533Cited 56 times