← Back to StoriesPress Release
An early spring drives butterfly population declines
long-term ecological studiesRocky Mountain Biological LaboratoryColorado Rocky MountainsStanford UniversitySpeyeria mormonia
Related Stories
Press Release
EARLY SPRING DRIVES BUTTERFLY POPULATION DECLINES "AHEAD-OF-TIME" SNOWMELT
Research Summary
EARLY SPRING DRIVES DOWN BUTTERFLY POPULATION, STANFORD STUDY SHOWS
Research Summary
ONE DOWNSIDE OF EARLY SPRING: A DROP IN ROCKY MT. BUTTERFLIES
Research Summary
A Spring Sprung Too Soon Is a Death Blow to Butterfly
Event Coverage
CLIMATE CHANGE EXPERT TO DELIVER LECTURE
Research Summary
Climate change's effect on Rocky Mountain plant is driven by sex
Event Coverage
SCIENCE: Warming, drying of Rocky Mountains can be deadly to native plants and insects -- studies
Research Summary
FORESTS: Earlier spring affecting bark beetles, butterflies
Related Publications
Publication
Climate Warming Drives Local Extinction in a Subalpine Meadow
Publication
Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, Gothic CO Ecology of Place: Making Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Spatially Explicit
Publication
The effects of anthropogenic change on pollination in plant-pollinator communities
Publication
How vulnerable are pollen-specialist solitary bees to temperature-mediated shifts in the timing of food availability?
Publication