scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Colorado State University

EducationFort Collins, Colorado, United States
About: Colorado State University is a education organization based out in Fort Collins, Colorado, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Laser. The organization has 31430 authors who have published 69040 publications receiving 2724463 citations. The organization is also known as: CSU & Colorado Agricultural College.
Topics: Population, Laser, Radar, Poison control, Soil water


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work studied the population and habitat dynamics of a threatened fish, the Arkansas darter, at four spatial scales (pool, reach, segment, watershed) in two intermittent Colorado plains streams to evaluate factors influencing darter persistence.
Abstract: Traditionally, threatened species management has emphasized conservation of individual populations and has assumed that abundance within suitable habitats is primarily governed by local environmental factors. However, recent research has revealed that landscape-level processes such as disturbance, dispersal, and habitat patch mosaic structure may also strongly influence local populations. We studied the population and habitat dynamics of a threatened fish, the Arkansas darter (Etheostoma cragini) at four spatial scales (pool, reach, segment, watershed) in two intermittent Colorado plains streams. At each scale, information on hydrology, habitat, and fish populations was combined to evaluate factors influencing darter persistence. At the pool scale, Arkansas darters persisted in most permanent pools during summer drought, tolerated extremes of hyperthermia and hypoxia, and were extirpated only when pools dried. Deeper pools had a higher probability of persisting during summer drought. At the reach scale, s...

383 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the frictionless, axisymmetric, balanced flow occurring in a thermally forced vortex on an f-plane and derive the diagnostic equation for the forced secondary circulation.
Abstract: We consider the frictionless, axisymmetric, balanced flow occurring in a thermally forced vortex on an f-plane. Following Eliassen (1952) we derive the diagnostic equation for the forced secondary circulation. This equation contains the spatially varying coefficients A (static stability), B (baroclinity), C (inertial stability), and the thermal forcing Q. Assuming that A is a constant, B = 0, and that C and Q are piecewise constant functions of radius, we obtain analytical solutions for the forced secondary circulation. The solutions illustrate the following points. 1) For a given Q an increase in inertial stability leads to a decrease in the forced secondary circulation and a change in the radial distribution of local temperature change, with enhanced ∂θ/∂t; in the region of high inertial stability. 2) Lower tropospheric tangential wind accelerations are larger inside the radius of maximum wind, which leads to a collapse of the radius of maximum wind. 3) The fraction of Q which ends up as ∂θ/∂t;...

383 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify a particular type of person, one who is both highly knowledgeable about politics and lacking in trust, who is most susceptible to ideologically motivated conspiracy endorsement and demonstrate that the moderators of belief in conspiracy theories are strikingly different for conservatives and liberals.
Abstract: Given the potential political and social significance of conspiracy beliefs, a substantial and growing body of work examines the individual-level correlates of belief in conspiracy theories and general conspiratorial predispositions. However, although we know much about the psychological antecedents of conspiracy endorsement, we know less about the individual-level political causes of these prevalent and consequential beliefs. Our work draws from the extant literature to posit that endorsement of conspiracy theories is a motivated process that serves both ideological and psychological needs. In doing so, we develop a theory that identifies a particular type of person-one who is both highly knowledgeable about politics and lacking in trust-who is most susceptible to ideologically motivated conspiracy endorsement. Further, we demonstrate that the moderators of belief in conspiracy theories are strikingly different for conservatives and liberals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

382 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
05 Mar 1998-Nature
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present direct observational evidence from a remote Southern Ocean region that almost all aerosols larger than 0.13 µm in the marine boundary layer contained sea-salt.
Abstract: There has been considerable debate about the relative importance of sea-salt and sulphate from non-sea-salt sources in determining aerosol radiative effects in the marine boundary layer. In the marine boundary layer, the most numerous aerosols are volatile sulphate particles smaller than about 0.08 µm (ref. 1) and most of the aerosol mass is in a few sea-salt particles larger than 1 µm. Yet intermediate-size aerosols between about 0.08 and 1 µm diameter are the most relevant to the radiative forcing of climate because they efficiently scatter solar radiation and also serve as cloud nuclei2. Indeed, Charlson et al.3 hypothesized that oceanic production of sulphate aerosols from the oxidation of dimethyl sulphide could be a powerful feedback in the climate system. It is generally assumed that marine aerosols smaller than about 1 µm are non-sea-salt sulphate, but a recent review cites indirect evidence that many aerosols in the sub-micrometre range contain at least some sea-salt4,5. Here we present direct observational evidence from a remote Southern Ocean region that almost all aerosols larger than 0.13 µm in the marine boundary layer contained sea-salt. These sea-salt aerosols had important radiative effects: they were responsible for the majority of aerosol-scattered light, and comprised a significant fraction of the inferred cloud nuclei.

382 citations


Authors

Showing all 31766 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Mark P. Mattson200980138033
Stephen J. O'Brien153106293025
Ad Bax13848697112
David Price138168793535
Georgios B. Giannakis137132173517
James Mueller134119487738
Christopher B. Field13340888930
Steven W. Running12635576265
Simon Lin12675469084
Jitender P. Dubey124134477275
Gregory P. Asner12361360547
Steven P. DenBaars118136660343
Peter Molnar11844653480
William R. Jacobs11849048638
C. Patrignani1171754110008
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
225.1K papers, 10.1M citations

94% related

University of California, Davis
180K papers, 8M citations

94% related

Pennsylvania State University
196.8K papers, 8.3M citations

94% related

University of Wisconsin-Madison
237.5K papers, 11.8M citations

93% related

Cornell University
235.5K papers, 12.2M citations

93% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023159
2022500
20213,596
20203,492
20193,340
20183,136