816 results — topic: Alpine & Subalpine Ecology
Carpenter_Meadow_experiment
This file contains data from the experiment at Carpenter Meadow to assess natural selection on flowering in local genotypes. Jill Anderson collected data in the field in 2010. Analyses included size at planting (number of leaves) and cohort as fixed effects, and row nested within block as random eff
Data from: Modeling intraspecific adaptation of Abies sachalinensis to local altitude and responses to global warming, based on a 36-year reciprocal transplant experiment
Intraspecific adaptation in Abies sachalinensis was examined using models based on long-term monitoring data gathered during a reciprocal transplant experiment with eight seed source populations and six transplantation sites along an altitudinal gradient. The consequence of local adaptation was eval
A study of flora along the vertical gradient of Avery Mountain with special emphasis on the identification of ubiquitous species on the west-facing slope
Distribution of plants in a wet alpine meadow near Copper Lake
A study of the flora of a sub-alpine meadow near Gothic
Drought resistance in subalpine nymphs of Somatochlora semicircularis Selys (Odonata: Corduliidae)
Ruth L. Willey, Harold O. Eiler, Drought Resistance in Subalpine Nymphs of Somatochlora semicircularis Selys (Odonata: Corduliidae), The American Midland Naturalist, Vol. 87, No. 1 (Jan., 1972), pp. 215-221
Effects of size-selective predation and food competition on high altitude zooplankton communities
Two distinct communities exist in a series of small subalpine ponds on Galena Mountain, Colorado, at 3,400 m. In the deep ponds, two predators, the culicid larva Chaoborus and the axolotl Ambystoma tigrinum, coexist with two small herbivores, the copepod Diaptomus coloradensis and the cladoceran Dap
Weather and the "regulation" of subalpine populations
Unusual spring weather climaxed by a late June snowstorm in the subalpine area around Gothic, Gunnison County, Colorado, had a profound effect on the biota. Damage to herbaceous prennial plans was extensive and the size of insect and small mammal populations was depressed. The storm caused the extin
Ecology of the fairy shrimp <i>Branchinecta coloradensis</i> Packard (Crustacea: Anostraca) related to its distribution in an alpine habitat
A study of a south-facing meadow in the Gothic area
Adaptations in <i>Mertensia bakerii</i> to alpine habitat
The meadow midst the aspens (<i>Populus tremuloides</i> Michaux.)
A study of the alpine willows <i>Salix nivalis</i> and <i>Salix artica</i>
Dinamoebidium coloradense Spec. Nov. and Katodinium auratum Spec. Nov. in Como Creek, Boulder County, Colorado
Aqueous geochemical dynamics of metals and rare earth elements in an acid rock drainage-impacted alpine watershed
Numerous mountain watersheds in the Colorado Mineral Belt (CMB) are impacted by acid rock drainage (ARD) and acid mine drainage (AMD), which mobilize metals and rare earth elements (REEs) into surface waters. In the upper Roaring Fork watershed near Independence Pass, natural ARD from a highly miner
Aqueous geochemical dynamics of metals and rare earth elements in an acid rock drainage-impacted alpine watershed
Numerous mountain watersheds in the Colorado Mineral Belt (CMB) are impacted by acid rock drainage (ARD) and acid mine drainage (AMD), which mobilize metals and rare earth elements (REEs) into surface waters. In the upper Roaring Fork watershed near Independence Pass, natural ARD from a highly miner
Aqueous geochemical dynamics of metals and rare earth elements in an acid rock drainage-impacted alpine watershed
Numerous mountain watersheds in the Colorado Mineral Belt (CMB) are impacted by acid rock drainage (ARD) and acid mine drainage (AMD), which mobilize metals and rare earth elements (REEs) into surface waters. In the upper Roaring Fork watershed near Independence Pass, natural ARD from a highly miner
Aqueous geochemical dynamics of metals and rare earth elements in an acid rock drainage-impacted alpine watershed
Numerous mountain watersheds in the Colorado Mineral Belt (CMB) are impacted by acid rock drainage (ARD) and acid mine drainage (AMD), which mobilize metals and rare earth elements (REEs) into surface waters. In the upper Roaring Fork watershed near Independence Pass, natural ARD from a highly miner
DWCZ- CO - Coal-Creek - Radon -(DWCZ-CC-RadonArray-KJohnson) - (2021)
*This resource is embargoed until fall 2022. Please stay tuned or contactczdata@colorado.edu for more information. Spring and stream sampling across Coal Creek watershed during summer of 2021 (June-October) to estimate groundwater chemistry. Sampled Approximately weekly for synoptic sampling of Coal
