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Rocky Mountain Research Station


Working Together to Restore the Colorado Front Range

September 02, 2015 Jennifer Hayes, Rocky Mountain Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

It started with a call from a concerned landowner living on Pine Country Lane, nestled in the foothills just west of Denver. The landscape spread out before them was scarred from previous high-severity fires, the homeowners told their local Conservation District. Their home was sitting at the top of...

Forestry

Conserving Monarch Butterflies and their Habitats

June 16, 2015 Carita Chan, U.S. Forest Service Research & Development

With more than 80 percent of the world’s flowering plants relying on pollinators, their importance to natural ecosystems and agriculture cannot be overstated. However, populations of pollinators, including bird, bat, butterfly, beetle and bee species, have been declining around the world...

Forestry

Managing for Wildfires Every Single Day of the Year

May 29, 2015 Carita Chan, U.S. Forest Service Research & Development

On June 9, 2012, a lightning strike sparked a wildfire in the mountains west of Fort Collins, Colorado, burning into the Roosevelt National Forest. The High Park fire burned over 87,000 acres and remains the third largest fire in recorded Colorado history, with more than 250 homes destroyed. Matt...

Forestry

Going to Great Heights for Data and Atmospheric Monitoring

March 31, 2015 Carita Chan, Research & Development, U.S. Forest Service

What lengths would you go to for the pursuit of science? That’s a question I asked myself when I had the opportunity to participate in data collection at the Glacier Lakes Ecosystem Experiments Site with John Frank and John Korfmacher, Electronics Engineer and Physical Scientist respectively, at the...

Forestry

Cold Water Can be Used as a Climate Shield to Protect Native Aquatic Species

March 04, 2015 Jennifer Hayes, U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station

Climate change and species invasions raise fears that iconic cold-water species like trout, salmon, and char could be extirpated from most of their ranges this century. A new study by researchers at the U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station published in Global Change Biology shows that...

Forestry

Cutting Edge Genetics Research for Wildlife and Fish Conservation

March 03, 2015 Carita Chan, Forest Service Research & Development

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research profile. The U.S. Forest Service has a long history as a leader in conservation genetics, and this recently took an exciting step...

Conservation Forestry Research and Science

Scientists Discover New Fish Species in the Upper Columbia River Basin

April 01, 2014 Carita Chan, Research and Development, U.S. Forest Service

U.S. Forest Service scientists at the Rocky Mountain Research Station in Missoula, Mont., have identified a new species of fish—the cedar sculpin ( Cottus schitsuumsh). Although thousands of new species are described by scientists each year, only a small percentage of them are animal species, and...

Forestry

Bugs' Life Not so Rosy Around Young Entomologist

February 25, 2014 Sherri Eng, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

It’s a wonder that Justin Runyon’s parents didn’t have insomnia. After all, who could sleep when the young bug enthusiast was throwing on floodlights outside the house in the middle of the night to attract and collect insects? “Yes, my parents were very patient with me,” said Runyon, a research...

Forestry

US Forest Service Researcher Uses Science to Fight Forest Fires

October 11, 2012 Deidra L. McGee and Robert H. Westover, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

With wildfires that raged out of control this fire season, a year of “devastating conflagrations” seems to be the only way to describe such massive destruction on the nation’s forested lands. And scientists who know something about limiting the power of these forest infernos are needed more than...

Forestry

Forest Service Research Helping Grasslands, Shrublands Endure Changing Climate

September 25, 2012 Reggie Woodruff, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

Climate change’s threat to forests – specifically to trees – has garnered much attention among people concerned with protecting our environment. Yet, a lack of research on the effects of climate change on grasslands and shrublands is leaving land managers with little information to make decisions on...

Conservation Forestry Research and Science
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