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Fort Collins Science Center

Welcome to the Fort Collins Science Center (FORT) located in Fort Collins, Colorado, just east of the Rocky Mountains. At FORT we develop and disseminate research-based information and tools needed to understand the nation’s biological resources in support of effective decision making.

News

Scientists with the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) coauthor new, more comprehensive method for estimating bat species distributions and trends over time

Gall watching is the new bird watching

Wild about wildlife: leveraging park visitor support to fund conservation

Publications

Legacies of a large flood and biological control on riparian vegetation successional trajectories along a dryland braided river Legacies of a large flood and biological control on riparian vegetation successional trajectories along a dryland braided river

The interplay of disturbance and stability drives vegetation dynamics. Disturbance reduces vegetation biomass, and stability fosters its development. In riparian systems, natural disturbance is largely manifested through flood-driven fluvial processes, but other forms of disturbance, such as herbivory or fire, may influence vegetation dynamics. We studied the successional trajectories of...
Authors
Eduardo González-Sargas, Steven R. Lee, Laura G. Perry, Patrick B. Shafroth

Integrated distribution modeling resolves asynchrony between bat population impacts and occupancy trends through latent abundance Integrated distribution modeling resolves asynchrony between bat population impacts and occupancy trends through latent abundance

Monitoring populations is challenging for cryptic species with seasonal life cycles, where data from multiple field techniques are commonly collected and analyzed as multiple lines of evidence. Data integration can provide comprehensive inferences while improving accuracy, precision, and scope but faces challenges in modeling misaligned resolutions and observational uncertainties. We...
Authors
Bradley James Udell, Christian Stratton, Kathryn Irvine, Bethany Straw, Jonathan D. Reichard, Sarah M. Gaulke, Jeremy. T.H. Coleman, Frank C Tousley, Andrea Nichole Schuhmann, Rich D. Inman, Melinda Turner, Sarah Nystrom, Brian Reichert

Wildfire risk information sources and the acceptability of fuels treatments near select WUI communities in the Western United States Wildfire risk information sources and the acceptability of fuels treatments near select WUI communities in the Western United States

Fuels treatments intended to reduce fuel loads and improve forest health on public lands offer one way to reduce wildfire hazards in the wildland-urban interface (WUI), where the natural and built environments meet. However, for fuels treatment implementation to be successful, it must comply with regulatory and scientific standards and be supported by local communities, as lack of...
Authors
Kelly Wallace, Hannah Brenkert-Smith, Patricia A. Champ, James R. Meldrum, Grant Webster, Christine Taniguchi, Julia B. Goolsby, Colleen Donovan, Carolyn Wagner, Christopher M. Barth, Josh Kuehn, Suzanne Wittenbrink

Science

North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)

Bats are essential contributing members of healthy, functioning ecosystems. They perform numerous ecosystem services like insect pest control and plant pollination, and provide enormous economic benefits through ecotourism, medical research, and novel biotechnologies. North American bats face unprecedented threats including habitat loss and fragmentation, white-nose syndrome, and wind energy...
North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)

North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)

Bats are essential contributing members of healthy, functioning ecosystems. They perform numerous ecosystem services like insect pest control and plant pollination, and provide enormous economic benefits through ecotourism, medical research, and novel biotechnologies. North American bats face unprecedented threats including habitat loss and fragmentation, white-nose syndrome, and wind energy...
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USGS Science Syntheses for Public Lands Management

Scientific information is fundamental to understanding how proposed actions on public lands may impact the environment. Development of new science is occurring at rates that can make it challenging for biologists, resource managers, decision makers, private landowners, and other stakeholders to ensure they are using up-to-date, high-quality science information to inform their decisions. Further...
USGS Science Syntheses for Public Lands Management

USGS Science Syntheses for Public Lands Management

Scientific information is fundamental to understanding how proposed actions on public lands may impact the environment. Development of new science is occurring at rates that can make it challenging for biologists, resource managers, decision makers, private landowners, and other stakeholders to ensure they are using up-to-date, high-quality science information to inform their decisions. Further...
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Developing structured science syntheses for use in NEPA analyses and decision making in the Bureau of Land Management

Science information is fundamental to understanding how proposed actions on public lands may impact the environment. However, agencies often have limited time to compile and synthesize existing science. We are working with land management agencies to develop a new type of science product— structured science syntheses—for facilitating the use of science information in public lands decisions.
Developing structured science syntheses for use in NEPA analyses and decision making in the Bureau of Land Management

Developing structured science syntheses for use in NEPA analyses and decision making in the Bureau of Land Management

Science information is fundamental to understanding how proposed actions on public lands may impact the environment. However, agencies often have limited time to compile and synthesize existing science. We are working with land management agencies to develop a new type of science product— structured science syntheses—for facilitating the use of science information in public lands decisions.
Learn More

Multimedia

photo montage of yearly riverbed changes across 2020-2024
Channel and vegetation change along a 6-mile reach of the Middle Green River
Channel and vegetation change along a 6-mile reach of the Middle Green River
screen recording of the INHABIT application, with a mouse clicking through different options and map changing in response
The Invasive Species Habitat Tool (INHABIT)
The Invasive Species Habitat Tool (INHABIT)
two people stand behind a fence, one holding up a telemetry device, mountains and sky in the background
Locating bison in Theodore Roosevelt National Park
Locating bison in Theodore Roosevelt National Park
two people look through binoculars at a group of bison standing out in a field, partly cloudy sky above
Observing bison behavior in Theodore Roosevelt National Park
Observing bison behavior in Theodore Roosevelt National Park
two people in lab coats stand next to a laboratory bench, molecular lab equipment on benches and freezers in the background
Sara Oyler-McCance and Jenny Fike in the Molecular Ecology Lab
Sara Oyler-McCance and Jenny Fike in the Molecular Ecology Lab
A researcher dressed in a teal lab coat and sitting at a lab bench uses a pipette to transfer liquid to a tube.
Sara Oyler-McCance working in the Molecular Ecology Lab
Sara Oyler-McCance working in the Molecular Ecology Lab
two people in lab coats look at a the screen of a large machine
Researchers look at genetic data in the Molecular Ecology Lab
Researchers look at genetic data in the Molecular Ecology Lab
eight small test tubes in a row under a UV light, three on the left containing a glowing substance, purple background
Point-of-use assay for brown treesnake detection
Point-of-use assay for brown treesnake detection
a swampy wetland with dead tree trunks coming up from the water, cloudy skies
Great Dismal Swamp
Great Dismal Swamp
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