The following pages link to Bradley Butterfield (Q139427):
Displayed 41 items.
- Long-term trends in restoration and associated land treatments in the southwestern United States (Q145674) (← links)
- Riverine complexity and life history inform restoration in riparian environments in the southwestern U.S. (Q145915) (← links)
- Future regulated flows of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon foretell decreased areal extent of sediment and increases in riparian vegetation (Q146505) (← links)
- Provenance, genotype, and flooding influence growth and resource acquisition characteristics in a clonal, riparian shrub (Q150148) (← links)
- The hydroclimate niche: A tool for predicting and managing riparian plant community responses to streamflow seasonality (Q150191) (← links)
- Temperature is better than precipitation as a predictor of plant community assembly across a dryland region (Q151234) (← links)
- Matching seed to site by climate similarity: techniques to prioritize plant materials development and use in restoration (Q156421) (← links)
- The right trait in the right place at the right time: Matching traits to environment improves restoration outcomes (Q156470) (← links)
- Soil surface treatments and precipitation timing determine seedling development across southwestern US restoration sites (Q156524) (← links)
- Hydrologic and geomorphic effects on riparian plant species occurrence and encroachment: Remote sensing of 360 km of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon (Q156782) (← links)
- Anticipatory natural resource science and management for a changing future (Q157756) (← links)
- Local climate and cultivation, but not ploidy, predict functional trait variation in Bouteloua gracilis (Poaceae) (Q234616) (← links)
- Does the stress-gradient hypothesis hold water? Disentangling spatial and temporal variation in plant effects on soil moisture in dryland systems (Q238140) (← links)
- Aridity increases below-ground niche breadth in grass communities (Q238998) (← links)
- Associations between riparian plant morphological guilds and fluvial sediment dynamics along the regulated Colorado River in Grand Canyon (Q253124) (← links)
- Gaps and hotspots in the state of knowledge of pinyon-juniper communities (Q253126) (← links)
- RestoreNet: An emerging restoration network reveals controls on seeding success across dryland ecosystems (Q253178) (← links)
- Plant water-use strategies predict restoration success across degraded drylands (Q259916) (← links)
- Plant production responses to precipitation differ along an elevation gradient and are enhanced under extremes (Q272348) (← links)
- Directional selection shifts trait distributions of planted species in dryland restoration (Q272937) (← links)
- Regional coordination between riparian dependence and atmospheric demand in willows (Salix L.) of western North America (Q276322) (← links)
- Modeling the impacts of Glen Canyon Dam operations on Colorado River resources (Q278104) (← links)
- Long‐term plant community trajectories suggest divergent responses of native and non‐native perennials and annuals to vegetation removal and seeding treatments (Q282020) (← links)
- U.S. Geological Survey Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center: Proceedings of the fiscal year 2023 annual reporting meeting to the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program (Q282750) (← links)
- Influence of climate, post‐treatment weather extremes, and soil factors on vegetation recovery after restoration treatments in the southwestern US (Q284309) (← links)
- Hydrological regime and climate interactively shape riparian vegetation composition along the Colorado River, Grand Canyon (Q285050) (← links)
- Divergent physiological responses of hydric and mesic riparian plant species to a Colorado River experimental flow (Q286653) (← links)
- Ontogenetic trait shifts: Seedlings display high trait variability during early stages of development (Q289179) (← links)
- Beyond traditional ecological restoration on the Colorado Plateau (Q294822) (← links)
- Life history characteristics may be as important as climate projections for defining range shifts: An example for common tree species in the intermountain western US (Q295171) (← links)
- Primary production responses to extreme changes in North American Monsoon precipitation vary by elevation and plant functional composition through time (Q296321) (← links)
- Functional composition of plant communities mediates biomass effects on ecosystem service recovery across an experimental dryland restoration network (Q309837) (← links)
- Inundation tolerance, rather than drought tolerance, predicts riparian plant distributions along a local hydrologic gradient (Q311110) (← links)
- Do seeding and seedling planting result in similar restored plant communities? (Q311469) (← links)
- Does restoration of plant diversity trigger concomitant soil microbiome changes in dryland ecosystems? (Q314513) (← links)
- Plant habitat suitability modeling for the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, Arizona under different management scenarios for Lake Powell releases (Q319115) (← links)
- Hydric and mesic riparian plant species data for quantifying divergent physiological responses to a Colorado River experimental flow (Q319450) (← links)
- Experimental inundation and drought response data for twelve riparian plants occurring along a local hydrologic gradient in the Colorado River ecosystem (Q319898) (← links)
- Riparian vegetation data downstream of Glen Canyon Dam in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area and Grand Canyon National Park, AZ from 2014 to 2019 (Q320050) (← links)
- Arrowweed (Pluchea sericea) morphological and physiological response data from a greenhouse inundation experiment (Q324741) (← links)
- Pinyon and Juniper location data, including a literature review citation list of Pinyon-Juniper systems from 1909 to 2018 (Q328942) (← links)