2,570 results — type: Journal Article

Article

Caddisfly behavioral responses to drying cues in temporary ponds: Implications for effects of climate change

Aquatic organisms that live at high latitudes and elevations are especially vulnerable to climate-change-induced alterations in snowpack, snowmelt, and evaporation rates, all of which affect basin filling and drying dates. Extraordinarily early drying events in shallow ponds and wetlands at our stud

2016Freshwater ScienceDOI: 10.1086/685583Cited 42 times
Article

Estimating species richness at large spatial scales using data from discrete plots

Estimating species richness in large biomes is a central challenge in ecology and conservation biology. However, accurate census data is often available only from small discrete plots distributed within the biome. Using tree species richness data collected from 48 plots (0.25 ha each) widely distrib

2004EcographyDOI: 10.1111/j.0906-7590.2004.03790.xCited 42 times
Article

Resource availability and population dynamics of <i>Nicrophorus investigator</i>, an obligate carrion breeder

Summary 1. Food resources for rearing young may influence insect populations. This is particularly true for insects that breed obligately on rare, ephemeral resources such as dung, fungi, or carrion. 2. Beetles in the genus Nicrophorus bury small vertebrate carcasses for rearing their young. Studies

2001Ecological EntomologyDOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2311.2001.00307.xCited 41 times
Article

Social variety in the yellow-bellied marmot: a population-behavioural system

This is the publisher's version of the paper's abstract, which can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0003347277901087.

1977Animal BehaviourDOI: 10.1016/0003-3472(77)90108-7Cited 41 times
Article

The behavioral ecology of nectar robbing: why be tactic constant?

It is documented that even though individuals can switch foraging tactics, they often do not, and hypotheses of floral constancy are extended to understand when and why visitors exhibit tactic constancy and raise questions for future research.

2017Current Opinion in Insect ScienceDOI: 10.1016/j.cois.2017.05.013Cited 41 times
Article

Observations on the Ecology of the Gunnison Prairie Dog in Colorado

Observations on the Ecology of the Gunnison Prairie Dog in Colorado Get access William Longhurst William Longhurst Department of Zoology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Journal of Mammalogy, Volume 25, Issue 1, 15 Februar

1944Journal of MammalogyDOI: 10.2307/1374714Cited 41 times
Article

Ecophysiology of first and second generation hybrids in a natural plant hybrid zone

Heterosis in WUE may help to explain the relatively high survival of both reciprocal F1 hybrids in dry sites within the natural hybrid zone, and differences among genotypic classes were spatially and temporally consistent.

2005OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/s00442-005-0064-xCited 41 times
Article

Avian reproduction over an altitudinal gradient. II. Physical characteristics and water loss of eggs

Although the effective diffusion coefficient for gases is inversely related to barometric pressure, rates of daily water loss during natural incubation and final water contents of pipped embryos are independent of altitude in eggs of redwinged blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus) breeding from sea level

1983Physiological ZoologyDOI: 10.1086/physzool.56.3.30152599Cited 41 times
Article

Host effects on herbivory and pollination in a hemiparasitic plant

The indirect effects of hosts on interactions between parasites and other species are not well understood, and it may be difficult to predict the outcome of host species effects on parasite performance due to the complexity of potential direct and indirect effects. For example, parasitic plants obta

2002EcologyDOI: 10.1890/0012-9658(2002)083[2700:heohap]2.0.co;2Cited 41 times
Article

Early snowmelt projected to cause population decline in a subalpine plant

How climate change influences the dynamics of plant populations is not well understood, as few plant studies have measured responses of vital rates to climatic variables and modeled the impact on population growth. The present study used 25 y of demographic data to analyze how survival, growth, and

2019PNASDOI: 10.1073/pnas.1820096116Cited 41 times
Article

Depth- and time-resolved distributions of snowmelt-driven hillslope subsurface flow and transport and their contributions to surface waters.

AbstractMajor components of hydrologic and elemental cycles reside underground, where their complex dynamics and linkages to surface waters are obscure. We delineated seasonal subsurface flow and transport dynamics along a hillslope in the Rocky Mountains (USA), where precipitation occurs primarily

2019Water Resources ResearchDOI: 10.1029/2019wr025093Cited 41 times
Article

CONTROLS ON THE LONGITUDINAL DISTRIBUTION OF CHANNEL‐SPANNING LOGJAMS IN THE COLORADO FRONT RANGE, USA

ABSTRACTChannel‐spanning logjams completely span the active channel and create longitudinal discontinuities of the water surface and stream bed across at least two‐thirds of the channel width. These jams disproportionately affect channel process and form relative to smaller jams that do not span the

2014River Research and ApplicationsDOI: 10.1002/rra.2624Cited 41 times
Article

Sources of intraspecific variation in the hostplant seeking behavior of Colias butterflies

Females tended to specialize upon one or two species, at least in the short term, and the pattern of oligophagy for the population as a whole is partly generated by variation in the host-seeking behavior of individual females.

1983OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/bf00376853Cited 41 times
Article

Niche relationships among species of aphids feeding on fireweed

Three species of aphids in the genus Aphis and one in the genus Macrosiphum feed on fireweed in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, U.S.A. These species differ in their time of colonization of fireweed, time of maximum number of colonies, feeding position on fireweed, relationships to tending ants, lif

1978Canadian Journal of ZoologyDOI: 10.1139/z78-250Cited 40 times
Article

Influence of detritus upon colonization of stream invertebrates

The effect of introduced detritus on the colonization of cages by benthic invertebrates within the substrate of two stony streams was examined. Pairs of substrate-filled screen cages were buried to a depth of 10–20 cm within the substrate of Otter Creek, Sauk County, Wisconsin, and the East River, G

1980Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic ScienceDOI: 10.1139/f80-125Cited 40 times
Article

Linkage disequilibrium over space and time in natural populations of Drosophila montana

The previously described allelic frequencies and linkage disequilibrium among the active and null alleles of four tightly linked loci coding for the alpha-esterases were found to be maintained by one population for 5 years, and were found to be present in two other populations which were shown to be

1975Proceedings of the National Academy of ScienceDOI: 10.1073/pnas.72.10.4095Cited 40 times
Article

Predator defense along a permanence gradient: roles of case structure, behavior, and developmental phenology in caddisflies

The combined results of these experiments suggest that caddisfly distributions along permanence gradients depend on a suite of primary and secondary predator defenses that include larval and pupal case structure, predator-specific escape behaviors, and the phenology of larval development.

2006OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/s00442-005-0303-1Cited 40 times
Article

Tactics for male reproductive success in plants: contrasting insights of sex allocation theory and pollen presentation theory

The basic tenet of sex allocation theory is that an organism's reproductive success, through either male or female function, can be represented as a sex-specific, monotonic, increasing function of the organism's investment of resources in that function. The shapes of these curves determine what patt

2006Integrative and Comparative BiologyDOI: 10.1093/icb/icj046Cited 40 times
Article

Ant-aphid interactions: are ants friends, enemies, or both?

Abstract Interactions between ants and aphids range from mutualistic to antagonistic. Understanding the ecological basis for such interactions requires understanding the costs and benefits to the aphids of ant-tending. Such an analysis is not simple, because ants can simultaneously have positive and

2007Annals of the Entomological Society of AmericaDOI: 10.1603/0013-8746(2007)100[887:aiaafe]2.0.co;2Cited 40 times
Article

Contrasting the hydrologic response due to land cover and climate change in a mountain headwaters system

Land cover change due to drought and insect-­‐induced tree mortality or altered vegetation succession is one of the many consequences of anthropogenic climate change. While the hydrologic response to land cover change and increases in temperature have been explored independently, few studies have co

2016EcohydrologyDOI: 10.1002/eco.1779Cited 40 times