Author: Benjamin Blonder
-
Early mornings in the aspen forest – creating hydraulic vulnerability curves
New lab NSF postdoctoral research fellow Roxanne Cruz-de Hoyos (center) is leading up summer efforts to measure quaking aspen drought tolerance. To do this she has to collect leaf hydraulic vulnerability curves, which involve a substantial amount of work in the lab – and the field. Here is how her process works. The work begins…
-
Mapping the mountains by UAV
The lab has been delving into remote sensing as a way to deepen understandings of plant community dynamics. Things look different from the air than they do from the ground, and drones can cover far more ground in a day than an ecologist with a ruler. This is the second year we are now monitoring…
-
Luiza’s desert study makes the cover of Ecology Letters
Luiza’s new paper, High water use in desert plants exposed to extreme heat, is featured on the cover of Ecology Letters for August 2020. The cover shows a cottonwood, one of the species whose water use behavior was measured in the study. Please give it a read!
-
Socially distanced fieldwork
Most of our lab remains shut down due to health reasons and university policy, but a small part of our team is out in the mountains collecting data. We are under an exemption for critical time-sensitive work, which applies to some of our long-term demography datasets in the Rocky Mountains. We have one team out…