2,139 results — topic: RMBL & Gothic

Dataset

Snowpack Duration Standard Deviation (Water Year 1993 - 2022)

This dataset represents an estimate of interannual variability in the number of days of continuous seasonal snowpack from 1993 - 2022. This map is derived from estimates of the first and last day of bare ground derived from long-term time-series of Landsat TM, ETM, and OLI imagery starting in 1993.

Ian Breckheimer2023
Dataset

Snowpack Duration Mean (Water Year 1993 - 2022)

This dataset represents an estimate of the mean number of days of continuous seasonal snowpack from 1993 - 2022. This map is derived from estimates of the first and last day of bare ground derived from long-term time-series of Landsat TM, ETM, and OLI imagery starting in 1993. These maps combine mon

Ian Breckheimer2023
Article

Inbreeding depression and maternal effects on <i>Aquilegia caerulea</i>, a partially selfing plant

Montalvo A. M.1994Ecology
Article

Effects of floral traits, pollinator visitation, and plant size on Ipomopsis aggregata fruit production

Current understanding of reproduction for animal-pollinated plant species is based on the premise that traits of flowers and inflorescences influence reproductive success by affecting pollinator behavior. This implies that within-population variation in such traits should affect reproductive success

Mitchell R. J.1994American NaturalistDOI: 10.1086/285637Cited 163 times
Article

Fly pollination of Linum lewisii (Linaceae)

Kearns C. A., Inouye D. W.1994American Journal of Botany
Article

Salamander recruitment in Rockies revisited

Journal Article Salamander Recruitment in Rockies Revisited Get access John Harte, John Harte Energy and Resources Group, University of CaliforniaBerkeley, CA 94720 Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Erika Hoffman Erika Hoffman Energy and Resources Group, Univer

Harte J., Hoffman E.1994BioScienceDOI: 10.2307/1312358
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.

Holsinger K. E., Thomson J. D.1994American NaturalistDOI: 10.1086/285707Cited 58 times
Article

Acidification and salamander recruitment

Journal Article Acidification and Salamander Recruitment Get access John Harte, John Harte Energy and Resources Group, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Erika Hoffman Erika Hoffman Energy and Resources Group, Univers

Harte J., Hoffman E.1994BioScienceDOI: 10.2307/1312246Cited 2 times
Article

Categorization of food types enhances foraging performance of bumble bees

Dukas R., Waser N. M.1994Animal Behaviour
Article

Time-dependent averaging of foraging information in least chipmunks and golden-mantled ground squirrels

Behavioural adaptations to resource variability were examined in field experiments with least chipmunks, Tamias minimus, and golden-mantled ground squirrels and were predicted by a dynamic patch assessment model that weights patch information according to its reliability.

Devenport L. D., Devenport J. A.1994Animal BehaviourDOI: 10.1006/anbe.1994.1111Cited 136 times
Article

Non-visual communication in freshwater benthos: an overview

This overview of non-visual communication in freshwater benthic animals emphasizes recent studies of the effect of chemical and mechanical signals on predator-prey interactions of benthic macroinvertebrates and amphibians. Prey species use chemical signals to modify their morphological development,

Dodson S. I., Crowl T. A., Peckarsky B. L.1994Journal of the North American Benthological SocietyDOI: 10.2307/1467245Cited 251 times
Article

Spatial navigation in natural habitats by ground-dwelling sciurids

Devenport J. A., Devenport L. D.1994Animal BehaviourDOI: 10.1006/anbe.1994.1099Cited 24 times
Article

The Gothic earthflow revisited: a chronosequence examination of colonization on a subalpine earthflow

A chronosequence study of permanent plots spanning 45 years on a 70-year-old subalpine earthflow in south-western Colorado suggests that it is the severe microclimate of the earthflow which is limiting further colonization of the site.

Curtin C. G.1994VegetatioDOI: 10.1007/bf00040333Cited 30 times
Article

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

Cowan C. A., Peckarsky B. L.1994Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic ScienceDOI: 10.1139/f94-047Cited 84 times
Article

Patch dynamics of <i>Glaucopsyche lygdamus</i> (Lycaenidae): correlations between butterfly density and host species diversity

Carey D. B.1994Oecologia
Article

Elevational variation of quinolizidine alkaloid contents in a lupine (<i>Lupinus argentus</i>) of the Rocky Mountains

Carey D. B., Wink M.1994Journal of Chemical Ecology
Article

Diapause and the host plant affiliations of lycaenid butterflies

Results of three years of study on the host plant affiliations of two lycaenid butterfly species (Lycaenidae) suggest that differences between the two butterflies in host plant range, plant tissue oviposited on by adults and consumed by larvae, larval growth rates, and adult flight season may be con

Carey D. B.1994OikosDOI: 10.2307/3546146Cited 7 times
Article

Indirect selection of stigma position in Ipomopsis aggregata via a genetically correlated trait

Campbell D. R., Waser N. M., Price M. V.1994EvolutionDOI: 10.2307/2410003Cited 22 times
Article

When do hummingbirds use torpor in nature?

The physiology of torpor in hummingbirds is well known from laboratory studies, but we still do not know when or how often this means of energy conservation is used in nature, whether regularly (the "routine" hypothesis) or only in response to inadequate food intake (the "emergency-only" hypothesis)

Calder W. A.1994Physiological ZoologyDOI: 10.1086/physzool.67.5.30163881Cited 32 times