Student Paper
Status of <i>Mustela frenata</i> in the Gothic area
Thesis
An investigation of the effects of pH, aluminum precipitate, and periphyton densities on benthic invertebrate populations in Paradise Basin, Colorado
Article
Time and wariness in yellow-bellied marmots
Article
Pollen viability, vigor, and competitive ability in <i>Erythronium grandiflorum</i> (Liliaceae)
Article
Reproductive success of colonial and noncolonial female yellow-bellied marmots
Chapter
Actual Problems of Marmots [sic] Investigation
Student Paper
The influence of edge effects on aquatic invertebrate diversity in the streams of the East River Valley of Colorado
Student Paper
Queen-queen interactions in the ant species <i>Formica neorufibarbis</i>
Student Paper
Floral phenotypic response of <i> Ipomopsis aggregata </i> and related hybrids to changing soil moisture and nitrogen enrichment
Plants are products of their environment. This is also true for flowers, which can be shaped through abiotic factors that lead to plastic response or natural selection. Both floral morphological traits and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) have the potential to be impacted by environmental condition
Article
Changes in ant community composition caused by 20 years of experimental warming vs.13 years of natural climate shift
Student Paper
Does predation effect abundance and diversity of zooplankton in beaver ponds?
Student Paper
A comparison of bird populations on Mount Crested Butte and Snodgrass Mountain
Student Paper
Temporal variation in high elevation plant-pollinator communities
Plant-pollinator communities contribute to global diversity and are a good indicator of the health of an ecosystem. Climate change is causing phenological changes of flowering plants and pollinators. Changes in plant phenology can lead to a pollinator not being able to find sufficient pollen and nec
Student Paper
Caddisfly Larval growth and Development as Functions of Temperature Fluctuations During Pond Drying.
Student Paper
Quantifying within-season floral trait distributions of flowers in Colorado Rocky Mountain sub-alpine dry meadows.
Thesis
Timing is everything: Phenological change and the implications for plants, pollinators and their interactions.
Thesis
The evolutionary ecology of ultraviolet floral pigmentation
Student Paper
Vegetation pattern dependency along the southwest-facing hillslope of the upper East River Watershed
Student Paper
Surveying beavers around RMBL and how effective are beaver ponds as sediment traps
Student Paper