2,570 results — type: Journal Article

Article

Linking surface processes, solute generation, and CO2 budgets across lithological and land cover gradients in Rocky Mountain watersheds

Abstract Chemical weathering in mountain critical zones controls river chemistry and regulates long‐term climate. Mountain landscapes contain diverse landforms created by geomorphic processes, including landslides, glacial moraines, and rock glaciers. These landforms generate unique flowpaths and wa

2025Water Resources ResearchDOI: 10.1029/2023WR036850Cited 4 times
Article

Polyphenism predicts actuarial senescence and lifespan in tiger salamanders

Actuarial senescence (called 'senescence' hereafter) often shows broad variation at the intraspecific level. Phenotypic plasticity likely plays a central role in among-individual heterogeneity in senescence rate (i.e. the rate of increase in mortality with age), although our knowledge on this subjec

2024Journal of Animal EcologyDOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.14048Cited 4 times
Article

Field performance of woodburning stoves in crested butte, Colorado

The carbon monoxide (CO) and particulate matter (PM) emissions of woodburning stoves have been measured under field conditions and the rate reductions occur because the certified stoves burn cleaner and the average burn rate of certify stoves in field use is less than the averageBurn rate of convent

1993Environmental Monitoring and AssessmentDOI: 10.1007/bf00545977Cited 4 times
Article

Timber Losses from West Fork Complex Fire in Southwest Colorado

Abstract This article provides an assessment of fire effects on timber burned in the West Fork Complex fire area, located in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado. The West Fork Complex fire burned 109,615 acres in 2013, and suppression costs alone totaled $33.2 million. Much of the fire occurred in sp

2019Forest Products JournalDOI: 10.13073/fpj-d-17-00062Cited 3 times
Article

Survival rates of translocated Gunnison sage‐grouse

Abstract Translocations have been used as a management tool for the federally threatened Gunnison sage‐grouse ( Centrocercus minimus ) but have not been rigorously evaluated. We estimated survival of translocated Gunnison sage‐grouse during the first year following release. Survival rates differed a

2022Wildlife Society BulletinDOI: 10.1002/wsb.1245Cited 3 times
Article

Party and Pressure Politics in Arizona's Opposition to Colorado River Development

1950Pacific Historical ReviewDOI: 10.2307/3635099Cited 3 times
Article

Lumsdenite, NaCa3Mg2(As3+V4+2V5+10As5+6O51)·45H2O, a new polyoxometalate mineral from the Packrat mine, Mesa County, Colorado, USA

ABSTRACT Lumsdenite (IMA 2018–092), ideally NaCa3Mg2(As3+V4+2V5+10As5+6O51)·45H2O, is a rare new polyoxometalate mineral from the Packrat mine, Gateway district, Mesa County, Colorado, USA. Crystals of lumsdenite occur as blades up to 0.2 mm in length, commonly growing in sprays. The crystals are da

2020The Canadian MineralogistDOI: 10.3749/canmin.1900061Cited 3 times
Article

Predicting the contribution of single trait evolution to rescuing a plant population from demographic impacts of climate change

Evolutionary adaptation can allow a population to persist in the face of a new environmental challenge. With many populations now threatened by environmental change, it is important to understand whether this process of evolutionary rescue is feasible under natural conditions, yet work on this topic

2025Evolution LettersDOI: 10.1093/evlett/qraf019Cited 3 times
Article

River Notes: A Natural and Human History of the Colorado 

Review of River Notes: A Natural and Human History of the Colorado. Wade Davis. 2012. Island Press. Pp. 176 $23.63 (Hardcover). ISBN 978‐1610913614.

2013Ethnobiology LettersDOI: 10.14237/ebl.4.2013.92Cited 3 times
Article

Altered Fire Regimes and the Persistence of Quaking Aspen in the Rocky Mountains: A Literature Review

The persistence of quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) is of significant importance to land managers in the Rocky Mountain region. Fire suppression in the past century has been im- plicated as a mechanism influencing aspen population dynamics, as aspen are generally consi- dered an early sera

2015Open Journal of ForestryDOI: 10.4236/ojf.2015.55050Cited 3 times
Article

Effect of elevation, season and accelerated snowmelt on biogeochemical processes during isolated conifer needle litter decomposition

Increased drought and temperatures associated with climate change have implications for ecosystem stress with risk for enhanced carbon release in sensitive biomes. Litter decomposition is a key component of biogeochemical cycling in terrestrial ecosystems, but questions remain regarding the local re

2021PeerJDOI: 10.7717/peerj.11926Cited 3 times
Article

PASSIVE TREATMENT OF MINING INFLUENCED WASTEWATER WITH BIOCHEMICAL REACTOR TREATMENT AT THE STANDARD MINE SUPERFUND SITE, CRESTED BUTTE, COLORADO

A pilot biochemical reactor (BCR) with a design flowrate of 3.8 l/m (1 gpm) has been operating at the Standard Mine Superfund Site for over four years, since August, 2007. The pilot system is entirely passive, using solar energy to power sampling equipment and pumping requirements. BCR treatment rel

2012Journal American Society of Mining and ReclamationDOI: 10.21000/jasmr12010137Cited 3 times
Article

COOPERATIVE RIVERFRONT PLANNING: THE COLORADO RIVER, GRAND JUNCTION, COLORADO

Abstract The Colorado River, the largest river system in the western United States stretches from the headwaters in Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado to Mexico. This mighty river evokes strong feelings and images to many people. Rich in history, it offers a haven for outdoor enthusiasts as we

1992Canadian Water Resources JournalDOI: 10.4296/cwrj1703264Cited 3 times
Article

Yampa River-Colorado River Drainage Divide Origin Determined from Topographic Map Evidence, Southern Routt County, Colorado, USA

Detailed topographic map evidence and a new Cenozoic geologic and glacial history paradigm are used to determine the previously unexplained Yampa River-Colorado River drainage divide origin. The Yampa River now flows in a north direction away from the Colorado River (between the Park Range to the ea

2021Open Journal of GeologyDOI: 10.4236/ojg.2021.118017Cited 3 times
Article

Evaluating 3 decades of precipitation in the Upper Colorado River basin from a high-resolution regional climate model

Abstract. Convection-permitting regional climate models (RCMs) have recently become tractable for applications at multi-decadal timescales. These types of models have tremendous utility for water resource studies, but better characterization of precipitation biases is needed, particularly for water-

2023Geoscientific Model DevelopmentDOI: 10.5194/gmd-16-6531-2023Cited 3 times
Article

A new Eocene cockroach species from the Green River Formation of Colorado, U.S.A.

2023BiologiaDOI: 10.1007/s11756-023-01331-8Cited 3 times
Article

Colorado river back from the dead

2014New ScientistDOI: 10.1016/s0262-4079(14)60509-1Cited 3 times
Article

The Utilization of the Colorado River

N the early development of a country rivers are useful mainly as avenues of travel. They are highways to the interior which lure the adventurer and the pioneer. Later, when the land becomes settled, they may or may not retain this primal use. Now protection is demanded from the ravages of the river,

1927Geographical ReviewDOI: 10.2307/208328Cited 3 times
Article

Consequences of nuisance algal blooms of Didymosphenia geminata on invertebrate communities in Rocky Mountain streams

As climate change accelerates, low summer stream flows are becoming increasingly common in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, USA. The diatom Didymosphenia geminata (Lyngb.) M. Schmidt, typically observed under low-flow and low-P conditions, produces nuisance growth—persistent and extensive proliferation

2024Freshwater ScienceDOI: 10.1086/729357Cited 3 times
Article

Seasonal controls on microbial depolymerization and oxidation of organic matter in floodplain soils

Floodplain soils are vast reservoirs of organic carbon often attributed to anaerobic conditions that impose metabolic constraints on organic matter degradation. What remains elusive is how such metabolic constraints respond to dynamic flooding and drainage cycles characteristic of floodplain soils.

2024Environmental Science & TechnologyDOI: 10.1021/acs.est.4c05109Cited 3 times