1,923 results — topic: RMBL & Gothic ·
Patterns of parasite prevalence and individual infection in yellow-bellied marmots.
AbstractPatterns of infection and prevalence result from complex interactions between hosts and parasites, the effects of which are likely to vary by species. We investigated the effects of age, sex and season on the likelihood of individual infection, and the effects of host population size, sex ra
Eocene fossil mammalia from the Sand Wash Basin, northwestern Moffat County, Colorado
Pocket gopher (<i>Thomomys talpoides</i>) soil disturbance peaks at mid-elevation and is associated with air temperature, forb cover, and plant diversity
Burrowing mammals can be ecosystem engineers by increasing soil aeration and erosion and altering the structure of plant communities. Studies that characterize the constraints on the distributions of fossorial mammal disturbances to soil can help predict changes in ecosystem engineering under future
Assessment of Coarse Sediment Mobility in the Black Canyon of the Gunnison River, Colorado
The frequency of flows mobilizing river bank sediment along a majority of the Gunnison River in the BCNP has significantly declined since 1966, and decreases in the frequency of significant sediment-mobilizing flows were more pronounced for regions within the BC NP where the channel gradient is lowe
River incision histories of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison and Unaweep Canyon: Interplay between late Cenozoic tectonism, climate change, and drainage integration in the western Rocky Mountains
Pennsylvanian and Permian stratigraphy in Crested Butte Quadrangle, Gunnison County, Colorado
Structural geology in the Crested Butte Quadrangle is more complex than previously reported. Outcrop relationships previously explained as unconformities are the result of large faults at Hunter's Hill and in Slate River valley. The following lithologic assemblages are recognized in the Absarokan ro
Experience may outweigh cue similarity in maintaining a persistent host plant-based evolutionary trap.
Abstract Rapid environmental change can decouple previously reliable cues from important resources, causing specialized recognition systems to result in maladaptive behaviors. For native herbivorous insects, such evolutionary traps are often imposed by attractive invasive plants that prove harmful t
First reports of turtle tracks from the Williams Fork Formation (‘Mesaverde’ Group), Upper Cretaceous (Campanian) of western Colorado
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
Experimental Test of the Combined Effects of Water Availability and Flowering Time on Pollinator Visitation and Seed Set
Climate change is likely to alter both flowering phenology and water availability for plants. Either of these changes alone can affect pollinator visitation and plant reproductive success. The relative impacts of phenology and water, and whether they interact in their impacts on plant reproductive s
Who pays? Intra- versus inter-generational costs of reproduction
AbstractReproduction is thought to be costly for female mammals due to high energetic costs associated with pregnancy and lactation. Such costs of reproduction can be particularly high for younger females, who are less experienced and smaller than fully grown adults, and can manifest themselves with
Closely linked alpha-chain hemoglobin loci in Peromyscus and other mammals: speculations on the evolution of duplicate loci
First report of a giant neosuchian (Crocodyliformes) in the Williams Fork Formation (Upper Cretaceous: Campanian) of Colorado
Camp Bird Mine Ouray County, Colorado
Pollen and vegetative secondary chemistry of three pollen-rewarding lupines
Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that, in these pollen-rewarding species, pollen secondary chemistry may reflect the need to attract and reward pollinators more than the need to defend pollen from herbivory.
The Exploration of the Colorado River
Symbiosis between <i>Euglena</i> and damselfly nymphs is seasonal
An endosymbiotic association has been demonstrated between Euglena and nymphs of three species of damselfly. The hindgut of the nymphs is inhabited by the euglenoid only during the winter. Symbiotic associations involving green euglenoids and insects are virtually unknown.
Parasitism modifies the direct effects of warming on a hemiparasite and its host
Climate change is affecting interactions among species, including host-parasite interactions. The effects of warming are of particular interest for interactions in which parasite and host physiology are intertwined, such as those between parasitic plants and their hosts. However, little is known abo
Calculating nectar production rates: residual nectar and optimal foraging
The fact that residual nectar exists is consistent with predictions of optimal foraging theory but more detailed work is necessary before it can be concluded that the volumes left behind in A. columbianum flowers are optimal.
Legume germination is delayed in dry soils and in sterile soils devoid of microbial mutualists: Species-specific implications for upward range expansions
Climate change is affecting species and their mutualists and can lead to the weakening or loss of important interspecific interactions. Through independent shifts in partner phenology and distribution, climatic stress can separate mutualists temporally or spatially, leading to alterations in partner