521 results — topic: Snow & Ice

Dataset

iRON_Soil Moisture_Calibrated

**Error has been found in Glenwood Springs station data. The 8in depth soil moisture sensor was mislabeled as the 40in depth sensor and vice versa for data sets uploaded prior to February 2024. Datasets uploaded after Feb 22, 2024 have the sensor labels corrected for all dates going back to installa

Osenga, E.C.2024DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1250550
Dataset

iRON_Soil Moisture_Calibrated

**Error has been found in Glenwood Springs station data. The 8in depth soil moisture sensor was mislabeled as the 40in depth sensor and vice versa for data sets uploaded prior to February 2024. Datasets uploaded after Feb 22, 2024 have the sensor labels corrected for all dates going back to installa

Osenga, E.C.2024DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.10694839
Dataset

iRON_Soil Moisture_Calibrated

**Error has been found in Glenwood Springs station data. The 8in depth soil moisture sensor was mislabeled as the 40in depth sensor and vice versa for data sets uploaded prior to February 2024. Datasets uploaded after Feb 22, 2024 have the sensor labels corrected for all dates going back to installa

Osenga, E.C.2024DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.10694850
Dataset

SnowEx20 Grand Mesa IOP Snow Water Equivalent and Snow Density, Version 1

Meehan, Tate G., Hojatimalekshah, Ahmad2024DOI: 10.5067/lanq53rtj2dr
Dataset

VISSS Raw data from SAIL at Gothic from November 2022 to June 2023

A Video in situ Snowfall Sensor (VISSS) records shadow images of precipitating hydrometeors from two perspective at a 90 degree angle with a frequency of 140 Hz. From this, hydrometeor properties such as particle size, shape, complexity, degree of riming, and fall velocity can be derived. The VISSS

Maahn, Maximilian, Ettrichraetz, Veronika, Steinke, Isabelle2024DOI: 10.5439/2278627Cited 3 times
Dataset

Global Bee Interaction Data

Last modified: July 3, 2024 IntroductionThis dataset comprises all bee interactions indexed by Global Biotic Interactions (GloBI; Poelen et al. 2014). It is published quarterly by the Big Bee Project (Seltmann et al. 2021) to summarize all available knowledge about bee interactions from natural hist

Seltmann, Katja C, Poelen, Jorrit H., Global Biotic Interaction Community2024DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12639658
Dataset

Additional file 2 of Virus diversity and activity is driven by snowmelt and host dynamics in a high-altitude watershed soil ecosystem

Additional file 2: Supplementary Table 1. Description of the 46 IMG metagenomes and 43 metatranscriptomes (related to Fig. 1A). Supplementary Table 2. Metadata for all the East River Watershed soil samples (related to Fig. 1A). Supplementary Table 3. DNA vOTU table with RPKM for each vOTU by sample,

Coclet, Clement, Sorensen, Patrick O., Karaoz, Ulas2024DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.24452589.v1
Dataset

Additional file 2 of Virus diversity and activity is driven by snowmelt and host dynamics in a high-altitude watershed soil ecosystem

Additional file 2: Supplementary Table 1. Description of the 46 IMG metagenomes and 43 metatranscriptomes (related to Fig. 1A). Supplementary Table 2. Metadata for all the East River Watershed soil samples (related to Fig. 1A). Supplementary Table 3. DNA vOTU table with RPKM for each vOTU by sample,

Coclet, Clement, Sorensen, Patrick O., Karaoz, Ulas2024DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.24452589
Dataset

Data from: A multi-year case study highlighting the influence of hydrological conditions on epidemic dynamics in a natural plant pathosystem

The scale of influence of hydrological and thermal conditions on disease remains uncertain for most wild plant pathosystems, thus restricting our ability to predict the impacts of climate change. Analysis of the spatiotemporal spread of a fungal rust pathogen throughout four naturally occurring flax

Duggal, Keenan, Jiranek, Juliana, Machado, Madison2024DOI: 10.5061/dryad.98sf7m0tcCited 2 times
Dataset

SPLASH Field Study; Snow-level Radar FMCW Moments at Brush Creek, Colorado, 2021-12-20 to 2023-09-05 (NCEI Accession 0289129)

From fall 2021 through summer 2023, NOAA and research partners conducted a field study (SPLASH - the Study of Precipitation, the Lower Atmosphere and Surface for Hydrometeorology). This field study established a state-of-the-art observing network in the East River watershed of the Colorado mountains

NCEI2024DOI: 10.25921/sgv1-1f48
Dataset

SPLASH Field Study; Snow-level Radar FMCW Moments at Kettle Ponds, Colorado, 2021-09-29 to 2023-09-06 (NCEI Accession 0289123)

From fall 2021 through summer 2023, NOAA and research partners conducted a field study (SPLASH - the Study of Precipitation, the Lower Atmosphere and Surface for Hydrometeorology). This field study established a state-of-the-art observing network in the East River watershed of the Colorado mountains

NCEI2024DOI: 10.25921/cgta-2v72
Dataset

SAIL-Net POPS Data Fall 2021 - Summer 2023

SAIL-Net was a DOE funded project in the East River Watershed near Crested Butte, Colorado with the goal of advancing our understanding of aerosol-cloud interactions in complex, mountainous regions. Through the deployment of a network of six low cost microphysics nodes in Fall 2021 in the same domai

Gibson, Leah2024DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12747225
Dataset

NEON AOP Survey of Upper East River CO Watersheds: Waveform LiDAR Binary Data

The waveform Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data in this package were generated through a National Ecological Observatory Network Airborne Observation Platform (NEON AOP) acquisition over watersheds of interest surrounding Crested Butte, Colorado. The remote sensing imagery acquired by the NEON

Tristan Goulden, H. Marshall Worsham, Bridget Hass2024DOI: 10.15485/2403350
Dataset

NEON AOP Survey of Upper East River CO Watersheds: Waveform LiDAR Binary Data

The waveform Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data in this package were generated through a National Ecological Observatory Network Airborne Observation Platform (NEON AOP) acquisition over watersheds of interest surrounding Crested Butte, Colorado. The remote sensing imagery acquired by the NEON

Tristan Goulden, H. Marshall Worsham, Bridget Hass2024DOI: 10.15485/2403350
Article

Lidar and deep learning reveal forest structural controls on snowpack

Forest structure has a strong relationship with abiotic components of the environment. For example, canopy morphology controls snow depth through interception and modifies incoming thermal radiation. In turn, snow water availability affects forest growth, carbon sequestration, and nutrient cycling.

Hojatimalekshah Ahmad, Góngora Joel A., Enterkine Josh2023Frontiers in Ecology and the EnvironmentDOI: 10.1002/fee.2584Cited 7 times
Student Paper

Early Snowmelt’s Effects on Floral Traits and Rewards of Two Subalpine Plant Species

The date of spring snowmelt is advancing in numerous alpine and subalpine ecosystems due to both rising temperatures and reduced snowpack associated with climate change. Snowmelt is a critical source of water for plants in subalpine ecosystems, so changes in snowmelt timing can affect many important

Searles C.2023
Student Paper

Effects of warming, dominant species removal, and accelerated snowmelt on aboveground plant traits in the Colorado Rocky Mountains

Noticeable changes such as the alteration of ecosystem productivity, the influence of species interactions with one another and its environment, and the transformation of habitats are all linked to climate change. Although plant functions might be a useful tool in understanding plant communities and

Piedra Z.2023
Article

Advanced monitoring of soil-vegetation co-dynamics reveals the successive controls of snowmelt on soil moisture and on plant seasonal dynamics in a mountainous watershed

Evaluating the interactions between above- and below-ground processes is important to understand and quantify how ecosystems respond differently to atmospheric forcings and/or perturbations and how this depends on their intrinsic characteristics and heterogeneity. Improving such understanding is par

Dafflon B., Leger E., Falco N.2023Frontiers in Earth ScienceDOI: 10.3389/feart.2023.976227Cited 10 times
Article

Virus diversity and activity is driven by snowmelt and host dynamics in a high-altitude watershed soil ecosystem

Background Viruses impact nearly all organisms on Earth, including microbial communities and their associated biogeochemical processes. In soils, highly diverse viral communities have been identified, with a global distribu‑ tion seemingly driven by multiple biotic and abiotic factors, especially so

Coclet C., Sorensen P. O., Karaoz U.2023MicrobiomeDOI: 10.1186/s40168-023-01666-zCited 53 times