Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
- That potent aroma prized by humans serves many functions for the plant.
- Mormons used the plant to make a caffeine-free hot drink, and Native Americans used it to relieve congestion.
- Aspen boletes build physical connections for mutualistic exchanges with quaking aspen.
- A collaborative study with a ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓƵ Boulder professor investigates how the risks and rewards of red squirrel reproduction is a microcosm of evolutionary patterns.
- Let’s ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓƵ Well presentation on Jan. 30 by ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓƵ Boulder professor to highlight diversity’s importance in many settings.
- The common wood nymph tastes with its feet and hears with its wings.
- The beautiful male emerged in October, eager to mate but destined for disappointment because he emerged too late in the season, just an example of natural selection at workI received an invitation to photograph a black swallowtail butterfly that had
- One puzzle leads to another question, as yet unanswered, about the cause.
- The Research and Innovation Office has announced the 2023 RIO Faculty Fellows cohort, which includes 17 faculty members from departments and research institutes spanning the campus.
- Beavers may appear to be one of the most sedentary of species, living in a secure den or lodge in a pond with all of their food within a short waddle, but now, in Boulder Canyon and in Alaska, it is evident that they are on the move.