Adaptation of Diapause Induction Cue Enables Range Expansion of the Tamarisk Leaf Beetle Across Latitude   Eliza Clark1*, Ellyn Bitume2, Dan Bean3, Amanda Stahlke4, Paul Hohenlohe5, Ruth Hufbauer6   1Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA;
      Riparian Vegetation Response to High-Magnitude Dam Releases on the Dolores River, SW Colorado   Cynthia Dott1*, Julie Knudson2*   1 Department of Biology, Fort Lewis College, Durango CO USA; dott_c@fortlewis.edu   2 Purgatoire Watershed Partnership, Trinidad CO US; jknuds
    Impact of Tamarix Biocontrol on Understory Plant Community Traits   Annie Henry1*, Eduardo González2, Anna Sher3   1 University of Denver, Department of Biological Sciences, Denver, CO, USA; annie.henry@du.edu 2 Colorado State University, Department of Biology, Fort Collins, CO USA;
      Salinity-Herbivore-Plant Interactions: Effects of Plant Health, Beetle Defoliation, and Local Adaptation on Tamarix Growth   Randall Long1*, Tom Dudley2, Adam Lambert3, Kevin Hultine4   1Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 2Marine S
      Assessment of Geomorphic Impacts of Vegetation Removal on the Colorado River in the Grand Valley, Colorado   Gigi Richard1* 1Fort Lewis College, Durango, CO, USA; garichard@fortlewis.edu     Recent and expanding efforts to remove tamarisk and Russian olive (TRO) from riparian zones may contribute to incr
      Evaluating Sod Mats as an Alternative to Plugs in Wetland Revegetation   Susan Sherrod1*   1Biohabitats, Denver, CO, USA; ssherrod@biohabitats.com   The City of Fort Collins (CO) Natural Areas Department used custom-grown wetland sod mats largely in place of herbaceous plugs to reve
      The Biology of Biocontrol: Enhancing the Biological Control of Tamarisk to Better Serve Riparian Restoration and Recovery   Dan Bean1*, Alex Gaffke2, Tom Dudley3, Levi Jamison4, Amanda Stahlke5 and Zeynep Ӧzsoy6   1Colorado Department of Agriculture, Palisade Insectary, Palisade, CO, USA;
      Private Lands Stewardship: Connecting People, Birds and Land   Kelsea Holloway1*, Lauren Connell2, Angela Dwyer3   1Bird Conservancy of the Rockies, Greeley, Colorado, US; kelsea.holloway@usda.gov 2Bird Conservancy of t
      A 184-Year Record of River Meander Migration from Tree Rings, Aerial Imagery, and Cross-Sections on The Powder River, Montana   Derek M. Schook*1, Sara L. Rathburn2, Jonathan M.
      Choked Out: Battling Invasive Giant Cane (Arundo Donax) Along the Rio Grande/Bravo Borderlands   Mark Briggs1*, Helen M.
    Why Do Some Restoration Projects Fail and Others Succeed? A Quantitative Look at 243 Sites for Environmental, Management, and Social Factors   Anna Sher1*, Annie L. Henry2, Lisa B. Clark2, Alex Goetz2, and Eduardo González2,3   1University of Denver, Dept.
    Floodplain Plant Community and Stream Channel Response More than Ten Years Following Tamarisk and Russian Olive Removal in Canyon De Chelly National Monument, Arizona   Lindsay Reynolds1*, Kristin Jaeger2, Keith Lyons3, Celeste Weiting7, Julianne Scamardo8, David Cooper4, Ellen Wohl5, and Sara Rathburn6   1Colorado State Universit
    Designing for Ecological Disturbance in River Restoration to Promote Native Species Regeneration: A Look at the River Bluffs Project on the Poudre River   Johannes Beeby1*, Travis Stroth1, and Sharon Bywater-Reyes2      1Stillwater Sciences, Boulder, CO, USA; jbeeby@stillwatersci.com,
    Plant Recruitment Under Beetle-Defoliated Tamarisk in Grand County, Utah: 2009 to 2019   Tim Graham1*, Wright Robinson2, Tim Higgs2   11701 Murphy Lane, Moab, UT 84532, USA; lasius17@gmail.com 2Grand County Weed Dept., 1000 Sand Flats Road, Moab, UT 84532, USA; 
      Tamarisk Beetle Colonization of The Rio Grande in New Mexico: A Long-Term, Multi-Faceted Study Using Genetic Analysis and Field Surveys   Levi Jamison1*, Zeynep Ozsoy-Bean2, Amanda Sthalke3, Matthew Johnson4   1Moab, UT, USA; ljamisonresearch@gmail.com
      Using Restriction Enzyme Digests as a New Method for Species Identification in Diorhabda Species   Chris Schaaf1   1Colorado Mesa University – Department of Biological Sciences, Grand Junction, CO, USA; Cschaaf@mavs.coloradomesa.edu    
      Supervised Classification of Russian Olive in the Animas Valley with NAIP Imagery and Object-Based Image Analysis   Anna Riling1   1University of Denver, Department of Geography and the Environment, Denver, Colorado, annariling@gmail.com     Object-base
      Riparian Assessments and Best Management Practices with Agriculturalists along the Lower Animas River   Alyssa Richmond1*, Melissa May2   1San Juan Watershed Group, Aztec, New Mexico, United States of America; sjwg@sanjuanswcd.com 2San Jua
      Common Reed (Phragmites australis): Nativity and Determining Lineages Using Genetics and Field Characters in Southeastern Utah (and Parts of Southwestern Colorado)   Kelli Quinn1*, Liz Ballenger2   1Southeast Utah Group National Park Service, Moab, Utah, USA; kelli_quinn@nps.gov