Alpine Plant Response to Climate Change[2:35]
Conservation on the High Line Canal[7:01]
Non-Living Collections at Denver Botanic Gardens[3:31]
Life without Fungi[4:08]
The Future of Non-Living Collections at Denver Botanic Gardens[9:00]
How to Collect a Herbarium Specimen and Tissue Sample[4:36]
Corpse Flower Pollination with New York Botanical Garden[1:46]
Is it an Endangered Species?[3:22]
The Lab at Denver Botanic Gardens[5:15]
Global Steppes: Denver’s Kindred Climates[1:49]
Herbaria Transformation[1:05]
Applied Conservation in Action: Protecting a Rare Cactus[1:29]
Urban Food Initiatives[3:09]
Regenerative Agriculture: Healthy Soil[3:58]
Regenerative Agriculture at Chatfield Farms[4:53]
Less Turf = Greener Landscapes[6:02]
Operation Pollination[2:58]
Chatfield Farms Veteran Farm Program[6:18]
Chatfield Farms Veterans Program: Zephrine’s Story[4:03]
Mordecai Children’s Garden 10th Anniversary[5:30]
The Making of Shofu-en Japanese Garden[3:27]
Herbalism Certificate Program at Denver Botanic Gardens[1:36]
Trailer[1:15]
Trailer[1:14]
>

INFO:
Mosquito Range is one of the most diverse mountain ranges in the state with rich plant biodiversity. At Horseshoe Mountain our scientists -- led by Alexandra Seglias, Seed Conservation Research Associate -- are studying the species Physaria alpina (Avery Peak Twinpod) to understand how it responds to climate change in its natural habitat. It is a rare endemic species that is only found in Colorado. Lab experiments have showed that seed germination responds well to warming temperatures, but a lab can only show so much. Once we have results from its natural habitat, we can tell how this and other species may respond to the warming climate.
Denver Botanic Gardens->所在地