- 11
- 567
UW Research Institute at AMK Ranch
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 8 ธ.ค. 2022
Harlow Seminar - August 8, 2024, Lusha Tronstad and Scott Hotaling
*The first 10 years of the Teton Alpine Stream Research project: What we’ve learned and where we’re going*
Speakers: Lusha Tronstad, University of Wyoming; and Scott Hotaling, Utah State University
Time: Thursday, August 8, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT
Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge
*Abstract*
Climate change is dramatically altering mountain ecosystems around the world. In the Teton Range, a salient impact of these changes is the decline of the region’s cryosphere-the portion of the landscape where water exists in frozen form. This includes recession of glaciers and perennial snowfield as well as losses of seasonal snowpack. However, another component of the mountain cryosphere-rock glaciers-has received considerably less scientific attention. Rock glaciers are larges masses of debris-covered ice that move and flow down the landscape similarly to the widely known “surface” glaciers. Due to their debris cover, rock glaciers are predicted to exist on the landscape longer than surface ice that is more directly exposed to solar radiation and warming air temperatures. In 2015, we created the Teton Alpine Stream Research (TASR) project to understand how climate-induced alterations to the Teton cryosphere will impact alpine stream biodiversity. Each August, we collect the same suite of abiotic (e.g., temperature) and biotic (e.g., macroinvertebrate community structure) data for 12 streams in the high Teton Range. Our study streams equally represent the three major stream sources in the Teton Range: glaciers, rock glaciers, and snowfields. Now in our 10th year of the project, we’re already observed a host of changes to the physical and biological structure of alpine streams in the Teton Range. Our results highlight the power of simple long-term monitoring for quantifying climate change impacts on mountain ecosystems and the potential for rock glaciers to act as key climate refugia for biodiversity into the future.
*Speaker Bios*
*Lusha Tronstad* is the invertebrate zoologist at the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, University of Wyoming. She studies invertebrates of management and conservation concern, and is an expert on aquatic invertebrates, mollusks and pollinators. Born and raised in the Rocky Mountains, Lusha enjoys working and recreating in National Parks and Wyoming to learn more about the species and the ecosystems they inhabit.
*Scott Hotaling* is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Watershed Sciences at Utah State University. He takes an integrative approach to the study of high alpine watersheds by linking ecology, physical science, and genetics to understand the past, present, and future of these threatened ecosystems. Along with Lusha Tronstad, they have been leading the Teton Alpine Stream Research project in the Teton Range since 2015.
Speakers: Lusha Tronstad, University of Wyoming; and Scott Hotaling, Utah State University
Time: Thursday, August 8, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT
Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge
*Abstract*
Climate change is dramatically altering mountain ecosystems around the world. In the Teton Range, a salient impact of these changes is the decline of the region’s cryosphere-the portion of the landscape where water exists in frozen form. This includes recession of glaciers and perennial snowfield as well as losses of seasonal snowpack. However, another component of the mountain cryosphere-rock glaciers-has received considerably less scientific attention. Rock glaciers are larges masses of debris-covered ice that move and flow down the landscape similarly to the widely known “surface” glaciers. Due to their debris cover, rock glaciers are predicted to exist on the landscape longer than surface ice that is more directly exposed to solar radiation and warming air temperatures. In 2015, we created the Teton Alpine Stream Research (TASR) project to understand how climate-induced alterations to the Teton cryosphere will impact alpine stream biodiversity. Each August, we collect the same suite of abiotic (e.g., temperature) and biotic (e.g., macroinvertebrate community structure) data for 12 streams in the high Teton Range. Our study streams equally represent the three major stream sources in the Teton Range: glaciers, rock glaciers, and snowfields. Now in our 10th year of the project, we’re already observed a host of changes to the physical and biological structure of alpine streams in the Teton Range. Our results highlight the power of simple long-term monitoring for quantifying climate change impacts on mountain ecosystems and the potential for rock glaciers to act as key climate refugia for biodiversity into the future.
*Speaker Bios*
*Lusha Tronstad* is the invertebrate zoologist at the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, University of Wyoming. She studies invertebrates of management and conservation concern, and is an expert on aquatic invertebrates, mollusks and pollinators. Born and raised in the Rocky Mountains, Lusha enjoys working and recreating in National Parks and Wyoming to learn more about the species and the ecosystems they inhabit.
*Scott Hotaling* is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Watershed Sciences at Utah State University. He takes an integrative approach to the study of high alpine watersheds by linking ecology, physical science, and genetics to understand the past, present, and future of these threatened ecosystems. Along with Lusha Tronstad, they have been leading the Teton Alpine Stream Research project in the Teton Range since 2015.
มุมมอง: 60
วีดีโอ
Harlow Seminar - August 1, 2024, Katherine Gura
มุมมอง 47หลายเดือนก่อน
*Effects of changing snow conditions on an iconic raptor of the GYE: the Great Gray Owl* Speaker: Katherine Gura, Colorado State University Time: Thursday, August 1, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge *Abstract* Movement is a key mechanism by which animals respond adaptively to environmental change. However, knowledge gaps ...
Harlow Seminar - July 25, 2024, Rachel Sailor
มุมมอง 22หลายเดือนก่อน
*When the cameras came: Photography and the American West* Speaker: Rachel Sailor, University of Wyoming Time: Thursday, July 25, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge *Abstract* Photographs of the Old West typically meet with a mixture of nostalgia, historical reverence, and pride of place for Western Americans, indeed most A...
Harlow Seminar - July 18, 2024, Maura Jane Farrelly
มุมมอง 81หลายเดือนก่อน
*Compliments of Hamilton and Sargent, or What Really Happened at the Historic AMK Ranch* Speaker: Maura Jane Farrelly, Brandeis University Time: Thursday, July 18, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge *Abstract* Most visitors to the UW-NPS Research Station at AMK Ranch in Grand Teton National Park think they know the story of...
Harlow Seminar - June 27, 2024, Laura Jones and Anne Beeman
มุมมอง 682 หลายเดือนก่อน
*Rooted in restoration: Collaborative sagebrush management practices and strategies* Speaker: Laura Jones, Grand Teton National Park; and Anne Beeman, University of Wyoming Time: Thursday, June 27, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge *Abstract* Sagebrush habitat restoration represents an essential land management strategy fo...
Harlow Summer Seminar - June 6, 2024, William Fetzer
มุมมอง 512 หลายเดือนก่อน
*Big fish eat little fish: An expanded framework to guide aquatic resource management* Speaker: William Fetzer, University of Wyoming Time: Thursday, June 20th, 5:30pm, talk begins at 6:30pm Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge Water resource and fisheries managers, policy makers, and stakeholders require a clear understanding of relationships between fish, hab...
Harlow Seminar - August 3rd, 2023, Ana Houseal
มุมมอง 31ปีที่แล้ว
*America’s largest classroom - what we learn from our National Parks* Speaker: Ana Houseal, University of Wyoming Time: Thursday, August 3rd, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge *Abstract* From the Golden Gate National Parks, Grand Tetons, and the Great Smokies to Monticello, Civil War battlefields, and Japanese internment c...
Harlow Seminar - July 27th, 2023, Hank Harlow and Harold Bergman
มุมมอง 45ปีที่แล้ว
*A (brief) history of research and partnership between the University of Wyoming and Grand Teton National Park* Speakers: Hank Harlow and Harold Bergman, Professors Emeritus, Department of Zoology and Physiology, and Former Directors, UW-NPS Research Station at AMK Ranch, University of Wyoming Time: Thursday, July 27th, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at th...
Harlow Seminar - July 13th, 2023, Frank van Manen
มุมมอง 42ปีที่แล้ว
*The remarkable recovery of the Yellowstone grizzly bear: biology, science, and management* Speaker: Frank T. van Manen, USGS Time: Thursday, July 13th, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge *Abstract* Few animals symbolize the wild landscapes of the American West more than the grizzly bear. The fate of grizzly bears in the Ye...
Harlow Seminar - July 6th, 2023, Grant Hopcraft
มุมมอง 93ปีที่แล้ว
*The Serengeti wildebeest migration: ecology and conservation in a changing world* Speaker: Dr. Grant Hopcraft, University of Glasgow Time: Thursday, July 6th, 5:30pm MT, talk begins at 6:30pm MT Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge *Abstract* The Serengeti is an iconic ecosystem that is best known for the epic migration of over 1.2 million wildebeest plus 250,...
Harlow Summer Seminar - June 29th, 2023, Merav Ben-David
มุมมอง 27ปีที่แล้ว
*Is protecting isolated species enough? On the role of Yellowstone National Park in the recovery of river otters in the Rocky Mountains* Speaker: Merav Ben-David, Professor, Dept. of Zoology & Physiology, UW Time: Thursday, June 29th, 5:30pm, talk begins at 6:30pm Location: UW-NPS Research Station at the AMK Ranch, in the Berol Lodge By the early 1900’s, river otters _(Lontra canadensis)_ were ...