Climate Change's Effect on Rocky Mountain Plant Is Driven by Sex
June 30, 2016
June 30, 2016
IRVINE, Calif., June 30 -- The University of California's Irvine campus issued the following news release:
For the valerian plant, higher elevations in the Colorado Rocky Mountains are becoming much more co-ed. And the primary reason appears to be climate change.
In a study appearing July 1in Science, University of California, Irvine environmental biologists Kailen Mooney and Will Petry and colleagues report that an altering climate over the past four decades has si . . .
For the valerian plant, higher elevations in the Colorado Rocky Mountains are becoming much more co-ed. And the primary reason appears to be climate change.
In a study appearing July 1in Science, University of California, Irvine environmental biologists Kailen Mooney and Will Petry and colleagues report that an altering climate over the past four decades has si . . .