Research Frontiers

Synthesized boundaries between what scientists know and what they don't, with identifiable paths to push the boundary forward. Each frontier is built from atomic gap-statements extracted across the research neighborhoods of the RMBL Knowledge Fabric, then clustered by semantic similarity and synthesized into a coherent narrative.

8 of 98 frontiers · Vertebrate Biology

Mechanistic Drivers of Subalpine Pollination Under Global Change

The frontier bridges sensory and chemical ecology, demographic modeling, population genetics, microbiome science, and applied disturbance ecology, because the mechanisms that translate floral traits into plant fitness cut across all of these subfields simultaneously.

basicapplied0.91focusedcross-cutting13 of 34
22 statements7 questions12 actions
SpruceColorado Springsreproductive successpollination exclusion experi…Hummingbird

Rangeland Restoration and Grazing Outcomes in the Gunnison Basin

Bridges restoration ecology, range science, invasion biology, wildlife management, and rare-plant conservation by treating Gunnison Basin rangelands as a shared experimental and decision landscape rather than a set of disciplinary silos.

basicapplied2.17focusedcross-cutting7 of 34
12 statements7 questions12 actions
livestockSouth Platte Riverbasal areadomestic livestockAspen

Climate-Driven Reassembly of Mountain Invertebrate Communities and Ecosystem Function

Bridges aquatic and terrestrial invertebrate ecology, community assembly, ecosystem biogeochemistry, and climate-driven phenology — because reassembly questions cannot be answered within any one of these alone.

basicapplied1.70focusedcross-cutting6 of 34
10 statements7 questions12 actions
not mentionedWest Snowmass Creekinterspecific competitionreciprocal transplant experi…small mammals

Aspen Decline and the Cavity-Nesting Keystone Complex

Bridges forest ecology, wildlife population biology, fungal pathology, and public-land governance because the fate of the aspen keystone complex depends on whether ecological understanding can be translated into decision triggers that operate on ecological rather than planning timescales.

basicapplied2.00focusedcross-cutting4 of 34
6 statements7 questions10 actions
DeltaWoodpeckersudden aspen declinemark-recaptureGunnison National Forest

Belowground Legacies of Plant Invasions in Subalpine Meadows

Bridges invasion ecology, soil microbial ecology, and insect-plant chemical ecology, because invader impacts in subalpine meadows can only be predicted by tracing belowground community changes through to aboveground food-web consequences.

basicapplied2.00focusedcross-cutting2 of 34
2 statements6 questions10 actions
FestucaElko Parkarbuscular mycorrhizal fungireciprocal transplant experi…Lepidoptera

Insect Prey, Irrigated Meadows, and Songbird Foraging

Bridges avian behavioral and sensory ecology, invertebrate community ecology, and agricultural hydrology — because insectivorous bird foraging in the Gunnison Basin is jointly produced by natural phenology and human water management.

basicapplied1.00focusedcross-cutting2 of 34
2 statements6 questions10 actions
SteersLakewoodforaging efficiencycattleLong Branch Reservoir

Sublethal Costs of Recreation on Montane Songbirds

Bridges behavioral ecology, eco-immunology, bioacoustics, and reproductive demography, because no single discipline's metric alone can distinguish tolerance from hidden cost under chronic human disturbance.

basicapplied2.00focusedcross-cutting1 of 34
1 statement7 questions10 actions
Woodpeckerflight initiation distanceSelasphorus platycercushabituation

Deer, Fear, and Human Refuges at Gothic

Bridges behavioral ecology, predator-prey theory, and plant community ecology because the consequences of altered fear responses propagate from individual deer decisions to long-term vegetation trajectories that other RMBL programs depend on.

basicapplied1.60focusedcross-cutting1 of 34
5 statements7 questions10 actions
mule deerGPS collar trackingecology of fearOdocoileus hemionustrophic cascade