2,570 results — type: Journal Article
Nectar sugar limits larval growth of solitary bees (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae)
The bottom-up effects of plant food quality and quantity can affect the growth, survival, and reproduction of herbivores. The larvae of solitary bee pollinators, consumers of nectar and pollen, are also herbivores. Although pollen quantity and quality are known to be important for larval growth, lit
An allometric approach to population cycles of mammals
The periodic cycles in populations of microtine rodents and hares are considered together to provide the suggestion that the natural period is endogenous and size-dependent, and may be a consequence of the physiological and reproductive pace of the life cycle that scales as the fourth root of body m
A Proterozoic Volcano-Plutonic Terrane, Gunnison and Salida Areas, Colorado
Early Proterozoic supracrustal rocks near Gunnison and Salida, Colorado include tholeiitic basalt, dacite to rhyolite, and intercalated sedimentary rocks. These were intruded by essentially synchronous gabbroic sheets, folded, and intruded by major plutons ranging from quartz diorite to granite. Pre
Effective mitigation of debris flows at Lemon Dam, La Plata County, Colorado
Is predaceous stonefly behavior affected by competition?
Behavioral experiments were carried out in flow-through observation boxes in New York and Colorado streams to determine whether interactions between pairs of predaceous stoneflies were characterized by exploitative or interference competition and to determine the effect of prey density on such inter
Heterogeneity in Hyporheic Flow, Pore Water Chemistry, and Microbial Community Composition in an Alpine Streambed
AbstractThe hyporheic zone, where surface water and groundwater mix, is an important microbial habitat where biogeochemical reactions influence water quality. We show that spatial variability in hyporheic flow in the East River near Crested Butte, CO, drives heterogeneity in streambed geochemical co
Reproductive isolation and hybrid pollen disadvantage in <i>Ipomopsis</i>
Abstract One cause of reproductive isolation is gamete competition, in which conspecific pollen has an advantage over heterospecific pollen in siring seeds, thereby decreasing the formation of F1 hybrids. Analogous pollen interactions between hybrid pollen and conspecific pollen can contribute to po
Life history consequences of climate change in hibernating mammals: a review
Climatic shifts to warmer and often drier conditions are challenging terrestrial species worldwide. These shifts are occurring more rapidly at higher elevations and latitudes, likely causing disproportionate effects to mammalian hibernators there. While there is some information about how these spec
Climate change shifts natural selection and the adaptive potential of the perennial forb <i>Bochera stricta</i> in the Rocky Mountians
Heritable genetic variation is necessary for populations to evolve in response to anthropogenic climate change. However, antagonistic genetic correlations among traits may constrain the rate of adaptation, even if substantial genetic variation exists. We examine potential genetic responses to select
Structure and location of burrows of yellow-bellied marmot
The yellow-bellied marmot spends approximately 80% of its life in a burrow. Burrows provide protection from the rigors of the environment, pred- ators and other marmots. They provide a hibernaculum in winter and may func- tion as a nursery in summer. Selection of a burrow site is therefore an import
Bedrock weathering contributes to subsurface reactive nitrogen and nitrous oxide emissions
Variability of Snow and Rainfall Partitioning Into Evapotranspiration and Summer Runoff Across Nine Mountainous Catchments
AbstractUnderstanding the partitioning of snow and rain contributing to either catchment streamflow or evapotranspiration (ET) is of critical relevance for water management in response to climate change. To investigate this partitioning, we use endmember splitting and mixing analyses based on stable
The role of chemotactile stimuli in the oviposition preferences of Colias butterflies
It is stressed that chemotactile cues are involved only in the final step of oviposition, and that understanding foodplant choice in nature will require in-depth investigation into the mechanics of individual search processes.
Two-year bee or not two-year bee? How voltinism is affected by temperature and season length in a high-elevation solitary bee
Organisms must often make developmental decisions without complete information about future conditions. This uncertainty-for example, about the duration of conditions favorable for growth-can favor bet-hedging strategies. Here, we investigated the causes of life cycle variation in Osmia iridis, a be
Watershed zonation through hillslope clustering for tractably quantifying above-and below-ground watershed heterogeneity and functions
Abstract. In this study, we develop a watershed zonation approach for characterizing watershed organization and functions in a tractable manner by integrating multiple spatial data layers. We hypothesize that (1) a hillslope is an appropriate unit for capturing the watershed-scale heterogeneity of k
Fluctuation in a Rocky Mountain population of salamanders: anthropogenic acidification or natural variation?
We monitored the demographics of the salamander Ambystoma tigrinum nebulosum as part of a community-wide study on the effects of acidification in sub-alpine (elevation 3600 m) ponds in central Colorado. A decline in A. t. nebulosum at this site from 1982 to 1988 has been hypothesized to result from
The relative importance of spatial vs. temporal variability in generating a conditional mutalism
We explored the relative importance of temporal vs. spatial variability to the conditionality of a mutualism between the treehopper Publilia modesta and the ant Formica obscuripes. The effect of the ants on the membracids varied considerably among years. When the effect of the ants on the membracids
Nonlinear effects of consumer density on multiple ecosystem processes
Summary1. In the face of human‐induced declines in the abundance of common species, ecologists have become interested in quantifying how changes in density affect rates of biophysical processes, hence ecosystem function. We manipulated the density of a dominant detritivore (the cased caddisfly, Limn
An altitudinal cline in UV floral pattern corresponds with a behavioral change of a generalist pollinator assemblage
Spatial variation in pollinator communities or behaviors can underlie floral diversification. Floral traits in the UV spectrum are common and mediate plant–pollinator interactions, but the role of pollinators in driving or maintaining their geographic variation has not been fully explored. We identi
Reach-scale Manipulations show invertebrate grazers depress algal resources in streams
Experimental tools that enable manipulations of organisms at larger scales allow for comparisons of processes across multiple spatial scales and expand our ability to make predictions about ecological processes. We performed reach scale (i.e., 50 m2) manipulations of invertebrate communities in stre
