4,853 results

Article

The Risk of Curtailment under the Colorado River Compact

Water supply in the Colorado River could drop so far in the next decade that the ability of the Upper Colorado River Basin states – Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, and New Mexico – to meet their legal obligations to downstream users in Nevada, Arizona, California, and Mexico would be in grave jeopardy. Leg

2019SSRN Electronic JournalDOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3483654Cited 9 times
Article

COLORADO PIKEMINNOW (PTYCHOCHEILUS LUCIUS) UPSTREAM OF CRITICAL HABITAT IN THE YAMPA RIVER, COLORADO

The Colorado pikeminnow (Ptychocheilus lucius) is a federally endangered fish, which was once abundant and widespread in the Colorado River basin. During exotic fish removal sampling in the spring of 2003, 2004, and 2005, 2 Colorado pikeminnow were collected upstream of critical habitat in the Yampa

2006The Southwestern NaturalistDOI: 10.1894/0038-4909(2006)51[262:cppluo]2.0.co;2Cited 9 times
Article

An Archaeological Survey of the Blowouts of Yuma County, Colorado

Ever since Yuma points were recognized as being particularly ancient, Yuma County, Colorado has been a logical area of interest. Nevertheless, until 1941 the county had received scant attention from professional archaeologists, with the sole exception of a partial surface survey by Dr. E. B. Renaud.

1949American AntiquityDOI: 10.2307/276389Cited 9 times
Article

Column-Test Data Analyses and Geochemical Modeling to Determine Uranium Reactive Transport Parameters at a Former Uranium Mill Site (Grand Junction, Colorado)

The long-term release of uranium from residual sources at former uranium mill sites was often not considered in prior conceptual and numerical models, as contaminant removal focused on meeting radiological standards. To determine the reactive transport parameters, column tests were completed with va

2022MineralsDOI: 10.3390/min12040438Cited 8 times
Article

Hematology of Four Rare Colorado River Fishes

1984CopeiaDOI: 10.2307/1445172Cited 8 times
Article

The Colorado River Aqueduct

One of the greatest achievements in engineering the West, the 242 mi long Colorado River Aqueduct brought water to Southern California and paved the way for the region’s tremendous growth.

2017Civil Engineering MagazineDOI: 10.1061/ciegag.0001187Cited 8 times
Article

Mineralogical, magnetic and geochemical data constrain the pathways and extent of weathering of mineralized sedimentary rocks

2023Geochimica et Cosmochimica ActaDOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2022.11.005Cited 8 times
Article

Mapping Bedrock Depths with Electromagnetic Induction in Costilla County, Colorado

2002Soil Survey HorizonsDOI: 10.2136/sh2002.1.0014Cited 8 times
Article

Wetter summers mitigated temperature stress on Rocky Mountain forests during the last interglacial warm period

Abstract Recent droughts have highlighted concerns of how rising summer temperatures will increase tree mortality rates across the western United States. We analyzed subfossil wood samples from Colorado dating to the last interglacial to assess the response of two common conifers to a previous warm

2021Geophysical Research Letters, e2021GL093678DOI: 10.1029/2021GL093678Cited 8 times
Article

PASSIVE TREATMENT AND MONITORING AT THE STANDARD MINE SUPERFUND SITE, CRESTED BUTTE, CO

At the 2008 ASMR conference, data from the initial two months of operation of a U.S. EPA pilot biochemical reactor (BCR) was reported. The BCR was designed and constructed in August, 2007 to treat mining influenced water (MIW) emanating from an adit at a remote site in southern Colorado. The origina

2009Journal American Society of Mining and ReclamationDOI: 10.21000/jasmr09011107Cited 8 times
Article

Statistical framework to assess long-term spatio-temporal climate changes: East River mountainous watershed case study

Evaluation of long-term temporal and spatial climatic change in mountainous regions is a critical challenge because of the interactive effects of multiple land and climatic factors and processes. Here we present the application of the statistical framework to the assessment of changes of climatic co

2022Stochastic environmental research and risk assessmentDOI: 10.1007/s00477-022-02327-7Cited 8 times
Article

Population dynamics and competitive outcome derive from resource allocation statistics: the governing influence of the distinguishability of individuals

The theory clarifies the condition for the energetic equivalence rule (EER) to hold, and provides a statistical explanation for the importance of species functional variation in determining population dynamics and coexistence patterns.

2015Theoretical Population BiologyDOI: 10.1016/j.tpb.2015.07.003Cited 8 times
Article

Detecting context dependence in the expression of life history trade-offs

Life history trade-offs are one of the central tenets of evolutionary demography. Trade-offs, depicting negative covariances between individuals' life history traits, can arise from genetic constraints, or from a finite amount of resources that each individual has to allocate in a zero-sum game betw

2024Journal of Animal EcologyDOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.14173Cited 8 times
Article

Simultaneous niche expansion and contraction in plant–pollinator networks under drought

Global climate change threatens to substantially rearrange species interactions, yet we lack clear predictions on how these changes will cascade through communities. Many perturbations associated with climate change, such as droughts, will change resource levels, with consequences for species intera

2022OikosDOI: 10.1111/oik.09265Cited 8 times
Article

Are ants botanists? Ant associative learning of plant chemicals mediates foraging for carbohydrates

Abstract 1. Although associative learning is widespread across animals, its ecological importance is difficult to assess because learning is rarely studied in the field, where informative cues are juxtaposed against complex backgrounds of uninformative noise. 2. Ants rely heavily on chemical cues fo

2020Ecological EntomologyDOI: 10.1111/een.12794Cited 8 times
Article

Influence of the Blue Mesa Reservoir on the Red Creek Landslide, Colorado

Research Article| January 01, 2004 Influence of the Blue Mesa Reservoir on the Red Creek Landslide, Colorado SCOTT R. WALKER; SCOTT R. WALKER 1URS Corporation, 8181 East Tufts Avenue, Denver, CO 80237 Search for other works by this author on: GSW Google Scholar PAUL M. SANTI PAUL M. SANTI 2Departmen

2004Environmental and Engineering GeoscienceDOI: 10.2113/10.1.13Cited 8 times
Article

Latest Pleistocene glacial chronology and paleoclimate reconstruction for the East River watershed, Colorado, USA

Reconstructing Pleistocene glaciation timing and extent is vital for understanding paleoclimate. Whereas late Pleistocene glaciation has been studied extensively in western North American mountain ranges, the glacial history of the western Elk Range in Colorado remains understudied, particularly in

2024Quaternary ResearchDOI: 10.1017/qua.2024.5Cited 8 times
Article

The benefits of being dominant: Health correlates of male social rank and age in a marmot

The benefits of dominance may not come without costs, particularly for males. For example, the “immunocompetence handicap hypothesis” states that males with enhanced mating success allocate resources to enhance reproductive output at a cost to their current health, whereas the “resource quality hypo

2021Current ZoologyDOI: 10.1093/cz/zoab034Cited 8 times
Article

Notes on the mammals of the Gothic region, Gunnison County, Colorado

Journal Article Notes on the Mammals of the Gothic Region, Gunnison County, Colorado Get access James S. Findley, James S. Findley Museum of Natural History, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KansasDepartment of Zoology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio Search for other works by this author on: O

1953Journal of MammalogyDOI: 10.2307/1375625Cited 8 times
Article

Cliff Attributes and Bird Communities in Jefferson County, Colorado

Bird communities associated with differing cliff variables in Jefferson County, Colorado, were sampled using point counts. Species-specific density estimates and community diversity values were compared among four cliff types: small cliffs, medium cliffs, large cliffs, and non-cliff sites. A model s

2006Natural Areas JournalDOI: 10.3375/0885-8608(2006)26[331:caabci]2.0.co;2Cited 8 times