Museum Studies Theses

Abstract

Due to generalized botanical collecting practices, herbarium specimens provide important long term data dating back hundreds of years. The historical data preserved in herbaria can be used to study biological responses to climate change, such as changes in plant phenology, across various habitats including understudied alpine ecosystems. This study will use historical data from over one hundred years of plant collecting, along with updated collecting and community science efforts, to investigate how climate change is influencing alpine plant phenology in the Southern Rocky Mountains. These records will be analyzed alongside historical climate data to explore phenological sensitivities to climate change, and further investigate these responses on the species level. While other studies have utilized biological collections as long-term data, this research stresses the importance of combining historical data with continued collecting and discusses the application of community science data in plant phenology research.

Language

English

Document Type

Thesis

Level of Degree

Masters

Department Name

Museum Studies

First Committee Member

Dr. Loa P. Traxler

Second Committee Member

Dr. Hannah Marx

Third Committee Member

Katelin Pearson

Keywords

Herbarium Specimen, iNaturalist, Alpine, Plant Phenology, Climate Change, Southern Rocky Mountains

Share

COinS