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SGS_010008
Swift fox are an important carnivore of the shortgrass steppe. Photo courtesy of Shortgrass Steppe LTER. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/04/2004
Views: 130
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SGS_010013
Full moon setting over the shortgrass steppe. Photo courtesy of Shortgrass Steppe LTER. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/04/2004
Views: 86
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SGS_010016_1
Summer convective thundercloud. Photo courtesy of Shortgrass Steppe LTER. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/04/2004
Views: 79
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SGS_010021
Work-study students collect in situ nitrogen mineralization cores on a long-term study site at the SGS-LTER. The prominent yellow flowers are the native Thelosperma filifolia. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/04/2004
Views: 98
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SGS_010025
One of the long-term studies at the SGS-LTER involves the monitoring of small mammal populations, achieved through small mammal trapping that occurs even during the winter. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/04/2004
Views: 91
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SGS_010006_001
Pronghorn antelope are ubiquitous on the grasslands of the Shortgrass Steppe LTER, Colorado. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/01/2004
Views: 102
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SGS_010027_001
The prairie rattlesnake (Crotalus viridis) is endemic to the shortgrass steppe. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/01/2004
Views: 77
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SGS_010005_001
Rainbow over the Shortgrass Steppe biome, SGS-LTER, Colorado. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/01/2004
Views: 161
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SGS_010014_001
One of the most widely recognized mammals of the shortgrass steppe is the black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus). Many studies at the SGS-LTER are investigating black-tailed prairie dog ecology and their influence on the structure and function of
Date: 11/01/2004
Views: 104
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SGS_2005_sitevisit_06
Shortgrass steppe habitat. SGS-LTER site visit 2005. SGS LTER.
Date: 10/28/2005
Views: 88
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SGS_2005_sitevisit_14
Weather instrumentation. SGS LTER site visit 2005. SGS LTER.
Date: 10/28/2005
Views: 95
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SGS_010007
The Pawnee Buttes rise above the shortgrass steppe in northeastern Colorado. Photo courtesy of Shortgrass Steppe LTER. SGS LTER.
Date: 11/04/2004
Views: 87
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