996 results — topic: Wildlife Behavior · CSL JSON (.json)Zotero, Pandoc, MendeleyRIS (.ris)EndNote, RefWorksBibTeX (.bib)LaTeX, Overleaf

Article

Effects of river regulation on riparian box elder (Acer Negundo) forests in Canyons of the upper Colorado River Basin, USA

2007WetlandsDOI: 10.1672/0277-5212(2007)27[278:eorror]2.0.co;2Cited 45 times
Article

Upper mantle shear structure beneath the Colorado Rocky Mountains

A tomographic inversion of teleseismic shear wave delays has been performed using data collected in the 1992 Program for Array Seismic Studies of the Continental Lithosphere Rocky Mountain Front experiment. The shear wave residuals used as data were corrected for known crustal, sediment and topograp

1996Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid EarthDOI: 10.1029/96jb01502Cited 45 times
Article

A cytostome/cytopharynx in green euglenoid flagellates (Euglenales) and its phylogenetic implications

The observations support the hypothesis that the phagotrophic euglenoids arose from a bondonid ancestor and gave rise to the phototrophs by chloroplast acquisition.

1985BioSystemsDOI: 10.1016/0303-2647(85)90036-xCited 45 times
Article

Gas exhange and water relations of two Rocky Mountain shrub species exposed to a climate change manipulation

2000Plant EcologyDOI: 10.1023/a:1009863201751Cited 45 times
Article

Population time budget for the yellow-bellied marmot

Time budgets for 17 behaviors were analyzed for cohort, day-period, season- period and interactions among the main effects for three colonies of yellowbellied marmots in the Upper East River Valley in western Colorado. These effects explained up to 79% of the variation in the behaviors. Marmots allo

1996Ethology, Ecology and EvolutionDOI: 10.1080/08927014.1996.9522936Cited 45 times
Article

Changes in water relations for leaves exposed to a climate-warming manipulation in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado

1997Environmental and Experimental BiologyDOI: 10.1016/s0098-8472(96)01043-xCited 44 times
Article

Effects of intra-peritoneal transmitter implants on yellow-bellied marmots

I implanted radio transmitters in 183 yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris); transmitters were replaced -<6 times in 73 animals, for 300 surgeries. Surgical procedures were simple, effective, and largely trouble-free. Survival 30 days later was -98%, and growth rates (21 g/day) were the same

1989Journal of Wildlife ManagementDOI: 10.2307/3801130Cited 44 times
Article

Coevolution: patterns of legume predation by a lycaenid butterfly

Perennial legumes in Gunnison County, Colorado suffer heavy differential flower predation by larvae of a lycaenid butterfly, and seem in turn to be an important factor in the evolution and distribution of the various legume species.

1972OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/bf00347982Cited 44 times
Article

Colonization of natural substrates by stream benthos

Natural substrates in mesh cages in a Tompkins County, New York, woodland stream were colonized by benthic invertebrates for periods of 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 30, and 42 d during autumn 1980. An experiment was designed for the purpose of distinguishing seasonal phenology from site-specific temporal (n

1986Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic ScienceDOI: 10.1139/f86-085Cited 44 times
Article

The relationship between flowering phenology and seed set in an herbaceous perennial plant, Polymonium foliosissimum Gray

To assess the potential for evolutionary change in blooming time within a population of Polemonium foliosissimum Gray (Polemoniaceae), flowering phenology, seed set and seed predation frequencies of individual plants were monitored from 1977-1981 in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. In only 1 of 4 years

1984American Midland NaturalistDOI: 10.2307/2425557Cited 44 times
Article

Restoration potential of the aquatic ecosystems of the Colorado River Delta, Mexico: Introduction to special issue on “Wetlands of the Colorado River Delta”

2013Ecological EngineeringDOI: 10.1016/j.ecoleng.2013.04.057Cited 43 times
Article

Effect of Imazapic on Cheatgrass and Native Plants in Wyoming Big Sagebrush Restoration for Gunnison Sage-grouse

Imazapic has shown potential to control invasive weeds, such as cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L.), during ecological restoration, but effects on non-target native plants are poorly known. In a replicated field experiment, as part of restoration for Gunnison sage-grouse (Centrocercus minimus) in Colora

2009Natural Areas JournalDOI: 10.3375/043.029.0301Cited 43 times
Article

Hydrological effects of hypothetical climate change in the East River basin, Colorado, USA

Abstract In 1988, the US Geological Survey began a study of the effects of potential climate change on the water resources of the Gunnison River basin. The Gunnison River, in southwestern Colorado, is an important tributary of the Colorado River, contributing approximately 40% of the flow of the Col

1995Hydrological Sciences JournalDOI: 10.1080/02626669509491417Cited 43 times
Article

Rates of nectar feeding in butterflies: effects of sex, size, age, and sugar concentration

Rates of ingestion of sucrose varied with sucrose concentration and butterfly sex, age and size for Speyeria mormonia Edwards (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae). Peak rates of ingestion occurred between sucrose concentrations of 30% and 40%, as predicted by previous theory. Males fed at a faster rate than d

1988Functional EcologyDOI: 10.2307/2389400Cited 43 times
Article

Badger predation on yellow-bellied marmots

Badger (Taxidea taxus) activity was recorded in colonies of yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris) during behavioral observations and trapping. Badgers were observed seven times in a marmot colony and extensive digging at marmot burrows was recorded five times in 40 y. When four badgers occup

2004American Midland NaturalistDOI: 10.1674/0003-0031(2004)151[0378:bpoym]2.0.co;2Cited 43 times
Article

Observations of Silver Iodide Plumes over the Grand Mesa of Colorado

A series of wintertime airborne tracing experiments was examined to determine some characteristics of the plumes of silver iodide smoke released either from the ground or from an aircraft over the Grand Mesa of Colorado. The plumes were identified in nearly every experiment by detecting the airborne

1988Journal of Applied MeteorologyDOI: 10.1175/1520-0450(1988)027<1125:oosipo>2.0.co;2Cited 43 times
Article

Low predictability of energy balance traits and leaf temperature metrics in desert, montane and alpine plant communities

Abstract Leaf energy balance may influence plant performance and community composition. While biophysical theory can link leaf energy balance to many traits and environment variables, predicting leaf temperature and key driver traits with incomplete parameterizations remains challenging. Predicting

2020Functional EcologyDOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.13643Cited 43 times
Article

Effects of patch quality and network structure on patch occupancy dynamics of a yellow-bellied marmot metapopulation

SummaryThe presence/absence of a species at a particular site is the simplest form of data that can be collected during ecological field studies. We used 13 years (1990–2002) of survey data to parameterize a stochastic patch occupancy model for a metapopulation of the yellow‐bellied marmot in Colora

2006Journal of Animal EcologyDOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2006.01038.xCited 43 times
Article

Trade-off mitigation: a conceptual framework for understanding floral adaptation in multispecies interactions

ABSTRACTExplanations of floral adaptation to diverse pollinator faunas have often invoked visitor‐mediated trade‐offs in which no intermediate, generalized floral phenotype is optimal for pollination success, i.e. fitness valleys are created. In such cases, plant species are expected to specialize o

2021Biological ReviewsDOI: 10.1111/brv.12754Cited 43 times
Article

Marmots and coyotes: behavior of prey and predator

Journal Article Marmots and Coyotes: Behavior of Prey and Predator Get access Kenneth B. Armitage Kenneth B. Armitage Division of Biological Sciences, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045 Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Journal of Mammalogy, Volume 63, Is

1982Journal of MammalogyDOI: 10.2307/1380453Cited 43 times