Ricketts Conservation Foundation: Clark’s nutcrackers in Yellowstone National Park: Seed resources, habitat preferences, spatial and temporal movements, and population status. $60,000.
With Assistant Professor Annika Mosier, USDA Forest Service, Forest Health Protection: Whitebark pine forest recovery after the 1988 Yellowstone Fires: regeneration dynamics in a warming climate. $16,900.
CLAS Dissemination Grant for publication costs, spring, $1,000.
With Assistant Professor Annika Mosier, CU-Denver Office of Research Services, Small grant program, Whitebark pine forest recovery after the 1988 Yellowstone Fires: regeneration dynamics in a warming climate. $3,000.
CLAS Dissemination Grant for publication costs, spring, $1000.
With Assistant Professor Annika Mosier, CU-Denver Office of Research Service, Large grant program: Forest community development after the 1988 Yellowstone fires: effects of changing climate and fire frequency and severity. $22,600
With Elizabeth Pansing: Effects of climate change and climate-altered fire regimes in whitebark pine populations. GRIN, Joint Fire Sciences Program. $21,028.
CU-Denver Office of Research Services Large grant program: Forest community development after the 1988 Yellowstone fires: effects of changing climate and fire frequency and severity.
Effects of climate change and climate-altered fire regimes in whitebark pine populations. GRIN, Joint Fire Sciences Program.
A. Direct seeding in two subalpine and treeline locations: examining the role of microsite type and rodent seed theft. B. Functional role of whitebark pine in the Wind River Range. USDA Forest Service, Forest Health Protection and Shoshone National Forest.
National Science Foundation, Geography and Regional Science Program, Implications of an invasive forest pathogen for alpine treeline dynamics. BCS-0850548. P.I.s, Lynn Resler (Virginia Tech), Diana Tomback, George Malanson (Univ. of Iowa). $439,006; UCD subcontract: $221,687.