816 results — topic: Alpine & Subalpine Ecology

Dataset

Data from: 'Abiotic influences on continuous conifer forest structure across a subalpine watershed'

This package archives the core data used for analysis and inference in 'Abiotic influences on continuous conifer forest structure across a subalpine watershed' (Worsham et al., 2025). All data were collected in the East River, Washington Gulch, Slate River, and Coal Creek watersheds of Colorado. In

H. Marshall Worsham, Haruko Wainwright, Thomas Powell2025DOI: 10.15485/2404585
Dataset

Data for "Depth of nutrient uptake by deep-rooted plants is regulated by water availability"

The data set consists of strontium (Sr) isotope ratios (87Sr/86Sr), water isotopes, soil cation concentrations, soil water potential sensor data, and results of 87Sr/86Sr mixing model. The plant canopy size files include the dataset of canopy dimension of sagebrush, lupine, and sunflower. The soil a

Langlang Li, John Christensen, Markus Bill2025DOI: 10.15485/2998779Cited 1 times
Dataset

Multiple RGB ortho-mosaics and digital surface models in 2017 and 2018 across the Lower Montane site in the East River Watershed, Colorado

Aerial imagery was collected at the Lower Montane site (Pumphouse) in the East River Watershed, Colorado during the spring, summer, and fall seasons of 2017 and 2018 to improve the understanding of seasonal vegetation dynamics and their drivers. The datasets include Red-Green-Blue (RGB) ortho-mosaic

Baptiste Dafflon, Emmanuel Leger, John Peterson2025DOI: 10.15485/1969564
Dataset

Integrated Hourly Meteorological Database of 20 Meteorological Stations (1981-2022) for Watershed Function SFA Hydrological Modeling

This dataset contains (a) a script “R_met_integrated_for_modeling.R”, and (b) associated input CSV files: 3 CSV files per location to create a 5-variable integrated meteorological dataset file (air temperature, precipitation, wind speed, relative humidity, and solar radiation) for 19 meteorological

Boris Faybishenko, Dylan O'Ryan2025DOI: 10.15485/2502101
Dataset

Data from: 'Abiotic influences on continuous conifer forest structure across a subalpine watershed'

This package archives the core data used for analysis and inference in 'Abiotic influences on continuous conifer forest structure across a subalpine watershed' (Worsham et al., 2025). All data were collected in the East River, Washington Gulch, Slate River, and Coal Creek watersheds of Colorado. In

H. Marshall Worsham, Haruko Wainwright, Thomas Powell2025DOI: 10.15485/2404585
Dataset

Mineralogy of floodplain sediments from Meanders C, O, and Z in the East River Watershed, CO, USA

This dataset includes bulk X-ray diffraction data from floodplain sediments collected as a part of the Watershed Function Scientific Focus Area (SFA) located in the Upper Colorado River Basin. The data were collected in order to investigate the role of biogeochemical cycling and other river corridor

Sergio Carrero, Patricia Fox, Peter Nico2025DOI: 10.15485/2526687
Dataset

Langenheim Plant Species Data (1953) and Associated Resurvey Datasets (2014), Gunnison Basin, Colorado, USA

Quantitative plant abundance data were collected from the same 121 sites at two time periods separated by 65 years (1948-1952 and 2012-2014) in the Colorado Rocky Mountains to examine changes in plant community composition. The sites range in elevation from 2600m to 4100m. Approximately 30 sites wer

Stephanie Zorio2025DOI: 10.6073/pasta/e6f71accdb618958c99f5bad09534c5e
Article

Direct Observation of the Depth of Active Groundwater Circulation in an Alpine Watershed

AbstractThe depth of active groundwater circulation is a fundamental control on stream flows and chemistry in mountain watersheds, yet it remains challenging to characterize and is rarely well constrained. We collected hydraulic conductivity, hydraulic head, temperature, chemical, noble gas, and 3H/

Manning A. H., Ball L. B., Wanty R. B.2021Water Resources ResearchDOI: 10.1029/2020wr028548Cited 20 times
Article

Mammalian herbivores restrict the altitudinal range limits of alpine plants

Abstract Although rarely experimentally tested, biotic interactions have long been hypothesised to limit low‐elevation range boundaries of species. We tested the effects of herbivory on three alpine‐restricted plant species by transplanting plants below (novel), at the edge (limit), or in the centre

Lynn J. S., Miller T. E. X., Rudgers J. A.2021Ecology LettersDOI: 10.1111/ele.13829Cited 12 times
Article

Snow melt timing acts independently and in conjunction with temperature accumulation to drive subalpine plant phenology

AbstractOrganisms use environmental cues to align their phenology—the timing of life events—with sets of abiotic and biotic conditions that favor the successful completion of their life cycle. Climate change has altered the environmental cues organisms use to track climate, leading to shifts in phen

Jerome D., Petry W. K., Mooney K. A.2021Global Change BiologyDOI: 10.1111/gcb.15803Cited 35 times
Article

Concentration-Discharge Relationships of Dissolved Rhenium in Alpine Catchments Reveal Its Use as a Tracer of Oxidative Weathering

Abstract Oxidative weathering of sedimentary rocks plays an important role in the global carbon cycle. Rhenium (Re) has been proposed as a tracer of rock organic carbon (OC petro ) oxidation. However, the sources of Re and its mobilization by hydrological processes remain poorly constrained. Here, w

Hilton R. G., Turowski J. M., Winnick M.2021Water Resources ResearchDOI: 10.1029/2021WR029844Cited 3 times
Article

Shifting macroecological patterns and static theory failure in a stressed alpine plant community

Abstract Accumulating evidence suggests that ecological communities undergoing change in response to either anthropogenic or natural disturbances exhibit macroecological patterns that differ from those observed in similar types of communities in relatively undisturbed sites. In contrast to such cros

Franzman J., Brush M., Umemura K.2021EcosphereDOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3548Cited 14 times
Article

Plant–pollinator interaction niche broadens in response to severe drought perturbations

The composition of plant–pollinator interactions—i.e., who interacts with whom in diverse communities—is highly dynamic, and we have a very limited understanding of how interaction identities change in response to perturbations in nature. One prediction from niche and diet theory is that resource ni

Endres K. L., Morozumi C. N., Loy X.2021OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/s00442-021-05036-0Cited 17 times
Article

Hidden Processes During Seasonal Isolation of a High-Altitude Watershed

Biogeochemical processes capable of altering global carbon systems occur frequently in Earth’s Critical Zone–the area spanning from vegetation canopy to saturated bedrock–yet many of these phenomena are difficult to detect. Observation of these processes is limited by the seasonal inaccessibility of

Buser-Young J. Z., Lapham L. L., Thurber A. R.2021Frontiers in Earth ScienceDOI: 10.3389/feart.2021.666819Cited 4 times
Article

High-discharge disturbance does not alter the seasonal trajectory of nutrient uptake in a montane stream

Balik J. A., West D. C., Taylor B. W.2021HydrobiologiaDOI: 10.1007/s10750-021-04660-4Cited 2 times
Article

Open-top warming chambers reduce animal pollination of two subalpine herbs

Open top chambers (OTCs) are a popular method for studying the biological effects of climate change through passive heating, but their effects on biotic interactions are poorly understood, especially for pollination. Here we use the subalpine plants Delphinium nuttallianum and Potentilla pulcherrima

Adamson C., Iler A. M.2021Journal of Pollination EcologyDOI: 10.26786/1920-7603(2021)638Cited 6 times
Thesis

Changes at treeline within the San Juan Mountains of Colorado

Repeat photography is a field method to study landscape change over time, yet most studies use a single pair of photographs spanning upwards of a century or more to ascertain change. In this study, I used repeat photography to study vegetation change across high-elevation environments within the San

Cardinal Steven J.2020DOI: 10.32469/10355/78585
Thesis

Early snowmelt and warming independently drive the reproductive phenology of subalpine wildflowers

Jerome D.2020
Student Paper

Quantifying Nectar Trait Responses to Natural Variation in Water Availability in Subalpine Plant Communities

Floral rewards are crucial for plant reproductive success and pollinator survival. Although nectar volumes and sugar concentrations have been quantified for many species of flowering plants, many questions remain regarding sources of intraspecific and interspecific variation, including the effects o

Kirschke G.2020
Document

Proceedings of the Third Intermountain Meadow Symposium

E.G. Siemer. Colorado State University and University of Wyoming. July 1, 1991.

1991