Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve

Spruce Gulch

A living laboratory providing research and educational opportunities for scientists, students, K-12 educators and nonprofit groups.


476 acres

embedded
within public lands

5800-7300 ft

elevation range

Since 2001

start of
research & restoration


The Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve is a 476-acre natural area in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains just outside Boulder, managed by the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR). The reserve is home to a pristine foothills watershed, making it a unique site for ecological and hydrological research. Its natural beauty and close location to CU Boulder campus also make it an excellent site for experiential learning in the humanities, social sciences, architecture and the arts. Our mission is to provide research and educational opportunities for scientists, students, K-12 educators and nonprofit groups.

Although Spruce Gulch is not open to the public, it is available for research, education and conservation initiatives from both CU-affiliates and other local organizations. If you would like to inquire further, you can reach out to reserve director Tim Seastedt attimothy.seastedt@colorado.edu.

A smiling Tim Seastedt with large ponderosa pines behind him

We are setting up the reserve to be a transformative program. It will benefit research, teaching, and outreach as well as advance environmental sustainability initiatives for our community.

Tim Seastedt

Director of the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve
Professor Emeritus, EBIO and INSTAAR, CU Boulder

A dynamic landscape

Panorama view of the mountains of Spruce Gulch created from a drone

Over the years, Spruce Gulch has been sculpted by extreme events and steady stressors.

FIRE

The 2020 Calwood Fire burned over 10,000 acres in Boulder County, but only portions of upper Spruce Gulch.

Spruce Gulch was severely impacted by fires in 1988 and 2003 and moderately impacted by fires in 2011 and 2020.

The burned area above shows a post-fire increase in trees and shrubs between 2005 (left) and 2025. Unburned areas are also showing increases.

FLOOD

BEFORE: The old mining road in 2011, the last remaining road on the property at that time. The others were abandoned decades earlier and have been colonized by trees, shrubs, and grasses.

AFTER: The old mining road was destroyed by a large flood in 2013. An extreme rainfall event over multiple days led to flooding, erosion, and landslides in the reserve and along the Front Range.

INVASIVE PLANTS

Spotted knapweed (Centaurea stoebe, purple flower) drives out native plants and destroys rangeland. Introduction of a knapweed-eating weevil to Spruce Gulch has helped reduce its impact locally.

Myrtle spurge (Euphorbia myrsinites, yellow-green mats) is another ‘to be eradicated’ plant species in the reserve. It's known for its toxic, milky sap that can cause skin irritation and is poisonous if ingested.

Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), an introduced annual plant, is a major wildfire concern. In one of the reserve's meadows, it declined by about 50% over 13 years when there was no grazing or burning.

GRAZING

BEFORE: Grazed area in 2006.

AFTER: Same area in 2019, 13 years after ranching and grazing ended.

Wildlife & conservation

This reserve, in conjunction with adjacent U.S. Forest Service land and Heil Ranch Open Space property, creates a major wildlife corridor. We yield the trails to a number of occupants, including:

Mountain lion (spotted on a trail cam)

Black bear (spotted on a trail cam)

Rattlesnake (photo by Timothy Seastedt)

The lack of active roads and infrastructure at Spruce Gulch allows wildlife to move freely.

A view of Spruce Gulch from atop one of its lightly treed hills and looking east down the valley and out onto the plains

Research program

Spruce Gulch hosts interdisciplinary research efforts in the natural sciences. The site is also open to researchers and collaborators from the social sciences, humanities and arts.

Knapweed at the start

The first research project at Spruce Gulch began in 2001, when the former owner of the site asked for INSTAAR ecologist Tim Seastedt’s help removing spotted knapweed (Centaurea stoebe), an invasive plant species, on the property. At the time, the Seastedt lab was involved in research on a relatively new experimental method for knapweed control. Instead of spraying herbicide, the scientists released innocuous knapweed-eating insects called flower weevils (Larinus species). The intervention was highly effective on the Spruce Gulch property. In 2021, the team .

Weevils on knapweed

Wide-ranging topics

Since 2001, Spruce Gulch has hosted numerous research projects and CU Boulder classes. The site has aided CU faculty and students in producing more than 40 journal articles, doctoral dissertations, master's theses and undergraduate honors studies.

Example topics

Grassland regeneration
Invasive species removal
Fire restoration
Plant genetics
Soil conditioning
Plant & insect communities
Landscape hydrology
Stream ecology
Geomorphology

Publications

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Janet S. Prevéy and Timothy R. Seastedt.Ecosphere. 2025.

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Janet S. Prevéy et al. Ecosphere. 2024.

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Dorota L. Porazinska et al. Plant and Soil. 2022.

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April M. Goebl et al.Restoration Ecology.2022.

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David G. Knochel and Timothy R. Seastedt.Biological Control. 2021.

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Amy L. Concilio et al.Plant and Soil.2017.

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Monica T. Rother and Thomas T. Veblen.Ecosphere.2016.

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Amy L. Concilio et al.Oecologia. 2016.

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James J. O’Connor et al.The Prairie Naturalist.2015.

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Janet S. Prevéy and Timothy R. Seastedt.Oecologia.2015.

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Amy L. Concilio et al.Ecosphere.2015.

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Janet S. Prevéy and Timothy R. Seastedt.Biological Invasions.2015.

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Timothy R. Seastedt.New Phytologist.2015.

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Janet S. Prevéy and Timothy R. Seastedt.Journal of Ecology.2014.

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Janet S. Prevéy et al.Restoration Ecology.2014.

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Anastasia P. Maines et al. Invasive Plant Science and Management.2013.

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Anastasia P. Maines et al.Ecosphere.2013.

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Stuart C. Wooley et al.Biological Science and Technology.2011.

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David G. Knochel et al.Oecologia.2010.

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David G. Knochel et al.Biological Invasions.2010.

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David G. Knochel and Timothy R. Seastedt.Ecological Applications.2010.

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Timothy R. Seastedt et al.Biological Control. 2007.

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Nehalem C. Breiter and Timothy R. Seastedt.Weed Science, 2007.

Barr, K.; 2025 (in progress). Effects of neighbor species identity on the growth of cheatgrass. Undergraduate Honors Thesis, CU Boulder

Garfinkel, C.F.; 2023. Thermal physiology and ecology of montane carrion beetle communities (one chapter). PhD. Dissertation, CU Boulder.

Goebl, A.M.; 2020. Factors affecting establishment, adaptation, and persistence of small populations in variable environments (only chpt 2: Empirical test of increasing genetic variation via inter-population crossing for native plant restoration in variable environments). PhD. Dissertation, CU Boulder.

Lyon, H.; 2019. Effects of soil conditioning by Bromus tectorum on decomposition rates of plant litter and soil properties. Undergraduate Honors Thesis, CU Boulder.

Sechler, B.; 2018. Biochar as a soil amendment for willow and cottonwood plantings in a riparian restoration. MS Thesis, CU Boulder.

Amir, Z.; 2016. Assessing collateral damage: interactions among native thistles and the introduced biological control agent, Rhinocyllus conicus in the Colorado Front Range. Undergraduate Honors Thesis, CU Boulder.

Reibold, R.H.; 2015. Precipitation and the interaction of seedhead biological control insects for spotted knapweed in the Rocky Mountain Front Range. Undergraduate Honors Thesis, CU Boulder.

Rother, M.T.; 2015. Conifer regeneration after wildfire in low-elevation forests of the Colorado Front Range: Implications of a warmer, drier climate. PhD. Dissertation, CU Boulder. (Spruce Gulch was one of multiple research sites.)

Prevéy, J.S.; 2014. Precipitation change in a semi-arid grassland: Plant community responses and management strategies. PhD. Dissertation, CU Boulder.

Maines, A.P.; 2013. Effects of biological control and precipitation on spotted knapweed (Centaurea stoebe) population dynamics. MS Thesis, CU Boulder.

O’Connor, J.; 2011. Bromus tectorum soil conditioning. Undergraduate Honors Thesis, CU Boulder.

Jamieson, M.A.; 2010. Chemical ecology of an invasive plant, Dalmatian toadflax (Linaria dalmatica), and two specialist herbivores, Calophasia lunula and Mecinus janthinus. PhD. Dissertation, CU Boulder (one chapter of dissertation).

Knochel, D.C.; 2009. Interactions among herbivory, soil resources, and plant competition govern the recruitment and dominance of spotted knapweed (Centaurea stoebe) in North America. PhD. Dissertation, CU Boulder.

Breiter, N. C.; 2005. How selective are biological controls? Evaluating the potential for nontarget herbivory by Mecinus janthinus Germar [Coleoptera: Curculionidae], a biological control agent for Dalmatian (Linaria dalmatica L. P. Mill.) and yellow toadflax (Linaria vulgaris P. Mill.) [Scrophulariaceae]. MS Thesis, CU Boulder.

Varied study sites

The reserve's location in the foothills provides many research opportunities across a range of landscapes and habitats.

Example areas
Click to zoom and see captions

Foothillsgrassland

Ponderosasavanna

Hillslopeecosystem

Riparianzone

Firerecovery research

Floodrecovery research

Precipitationmanipulation

Cheatgrassresearch

Modest management
The reserve is managed using low impact, science-based methods that preserve or enhance site conditions. For example, weeds and pests are managed using hand tools and cautiously introduced biological controls. No herbicides or pesticides may be used.

A growing team of researchers

More than 30 faculty and students have participated in research at Spruce Gulch so far, mostly from CU Boulder and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).

Participating CU Boulder units

Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Geography

Geological Sciences

CU Museum of Natural History

Anthropology

usgs green logo

A special thanks goes to Dr. Janet Prevéy of USGS for all her efforts.

Advisory committee

  • Nancy Emery (EBIO + INSTAAR)
  • Christy McCain (EBIO + MUSM)
  • Keith Musselman (INSTAAR + GEOG)
  • Irina Overeem (INSTAAR + GEOL)
  • Julian Resasco (EBIO)
  • Katie Suding (INSTAAR + EBIO)
  • William Taylor (ANTH + MUSM)

Thank you, volunteers

Our volunteers have contributed thousands of hours of research and restoration help, including removing invasive plant species by hand. More volunteers are needed. If you are interested, contact reserve director Tim Seastedt.

10 enthusiastic people, with hats, sunglasses, and backpacks, pose for a group photo on a dry grassy hillslope dotted by pine trees

Boulder community impact

Spruce Gulch's impact extends beyond INSTAAR and CU Boulder. We partner with local leaders and organizations to identify and solve environmental sustainability issues that impact local communities.

8 people work on a grassy rocky hillslope to remove a bright green invasive plant

An AmeriCorps team removes myrtle spurge from a hillside that was severely burned in the Overland Fire of 2003.

An upcoming BERC workshop

The research team at Spruce Gulch recently helped form the Boulder Ecosystem Resilience Collaborative (BERC) and is busy planning a kickoff workshop for the group. The meeting will bring together academics, managers, policy makers and stakeholders to identify pressing applied research questions important to the Boulder community. Example actions that can be undertaken at Spruce Gulch include:

  • Evaluating biotic responses to climate change and nature-based solutions.
  • Improving ecological resilience to extreme events.
  • Assessing invasive species and grassland sustainability.
  • Empowering land stewards and enhancing cultural values.

Partnering with the city

CU’s acquisition of the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve has enormous potential benefits for our community. As we face the growing impacts of climate change on our local environment, we have an urgent need for places where we can monitor these changes and identify land stewardship strategies that can reduce these impacts. We look forward to working closely with CU and its remarkable faculty and students in using this site to help explore strategies for enhancing our social and environmental resilience to these changes.

Brett Kencairn
Sr Policy Advisor for Climate & Resilience,
City of Boulder

“476 acres of possibility near Boulder for science, sustainability and the arts”

That's the title of an op-ed written by Katie Suding (Spruce Gulch advisory committee member and CU Boulder distinguished professor). Here she explores the future of the Reserve, showing how it strengthens Boulder’s network of conserved lands serving science and the public good.

Linda Holubar Sanabria's donation

Having grown up on this land and having it be a part of my family for almost a century, I view it as my heart and soul and want nothing more than to protect it.

In 2025, Linda Holubar Sanabria generously donated the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve to CU Boulder, along with additional endowment funds to support ecological and academic work at the site. The gifts open new educational possibilities across disciplines, from the sciences to the arts and humanities.

More about the gifts

History & ecology timeline

Today, Spruce Gulch is a mosaic of ponderosa pine savanna, meadow and riparian areas. The site provides excellent habitat for invertebrates, mammals and birds. Overall, Spruce Gulch is home to a large percentage of the plant and animal species found in Boulder County.

Over the years, the landscape, flora and fauna of Spruce Gulch have been shaped, in part, by human impacts and extreme weather. The following timeline documents some of these events. Some dates are estimates based on limited assessment of artifacts found at the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve.

  1. STEP 1

    Pre 1850

    Archaeological evidence indicates that Indigenous peoples occupied the land at the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve for thousands of years before European settlers arrived in the American West. The Arapaho peoples are likely the last Native American inhabitants of the land. Before the 1850's, native flora and fauna flourish.

  2. STEP 2

    1880s

    During the late 1800s, a number of prospectors file mining claims on the site. Primitive roads are cut through the rugged hillside, small mines are excavated and loggers clearcut the forest. One prospector establishes a homestead at the confluence of Spruce Gulch and a smaller creek flowing from the north. Roads, mines and logging operations heavily impact plant communities and wildlife, and grazing livestock are introduced.

  3. STEP 3

    1910s

    By the early 1900s, mining and logging operations give way to small-scale ranching and farming. In the absence of industry, the ecosystem bounces back — wildflowers spring up in the meadows, ponderosa pines grow on the hillsides and riparian vegetation creeps up along the creek. With the plants, comes wildlife habitat. Birds, grazers and predators return to the land, which is now a sanctuary for mountain lions, mule deer and songbirds.

  4. STEP 4

    1927

    Before CU Boulder acquires the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve in 2025, the site had been owned by the same family for almost a century. In 1927, Irma Freudenberg buys 500 acres of land in Lefthand Canyon. Together with her children, she establishes what the family calls Red Rock Ranch. They keep a small herd of cattle, several horses and chickens on the property. They also grow alfalfa, wheat and apples.

  5. STEP 5

    1959

    After Irma's death in 1959, her daughter, Alice Holubar, inherits Red Rock Ranch along with 174 acres of land. Then, in 1962, Alice’s husband, LeRoy Holubar, purchases 320 acres that comprise the rest of the Spruce Gulch basin. The house and some acreage of the former Red Rock Ranch still remain in the family today. The rest of Alice and LeRoy’s combined acreage is now the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve.

  6. STEP 6

    1980s

    Spotted knapweed spreads across Colorado’s front range. The invasive forb arrives at Spruce Gulch after the U.S. Forest Service distributes contaminated grass seed to reestablish vegetation destroyed by a wildfire.

  7. STEP 7

    1988

    A 1988 wildfire severely impacted the Gulch.

  8. STEP 8

    1994

    LeRoy Holubar’s daughter, Linda Holubar Sanabria, inherits the Spruce Gulch property after her father’s death. For the next seven years, she works tenaciously to eradicate knapweed from the land.

  9. STEP 9

    1998

    Lefthand Reservoir Fire (small)

  10. STEP 10

    2000

    2000 Lefthand Canyon Fire (small)

  11. STEP 11

    2001

    Linda Holubar Sanabria's mission to fight knapweed encroachment leads her to recruit help from INSTAAR ecologist Timothy Seastedt. Seastedt’s lab releases knapweed-eating weevils at the site as part of a biocontrol experiment. Over the next 24 years, Seastedt brings collaborators and students to the site, which becomes a hub for ecological research and education.

  12. STEP 12

    2003

    Overland Fire (large)

  13. STEP 13

    2006

    The end of ranching and grazing on the property.

  14. STEP 14

    2008

    Volunteers begin removing invasive plant species by hand under the direction of the Seastedt lab.

  15. STEP 15

    2011

    2011 Lefthand Canyon Fire (small)

  16. STEP 16

    2013

    An extreme rainfall event over multiple days causes flooding and landslides. Both native and invasive species are reseeded from adjacent land.

  17. STEP 17

    2020

    Calwood Fire (large)

  18. STEP 18

    2025

    Linda Holubar Sanabria donates the property to CU, along with an endowment to support ongoing research and education opportunities on the reserve. INSTAAR now leads research efforts at the Spruce Gulch Wildlife and Research Reserve and Seastedt is the reserve director.

Get involved in Spruce Gulch

As programming at Spruce Gulch gets underway, watch this website for opportunities to get involved. We anticipate hosting special events where small groups or individuals can participate despite the Reserve not being open to the public for exploring.

Some ideas we're considering:

  • Volunteers can keep the reserve’s ecosystems healthy by removing noxious weeds, repairing waterways and reducing fire risk.
  • Nature nerds can join a guided walk to learn about local plants, birds or mushrooms.
  • Painters and poets can find inspiration in its cliffs and canyons.
  • Citizen scientists can help with hands-on research — tracking climate trends, mapping exotic species and monitoring ecological changes.

Background image: Volunteers from a co-sponsored U.S. Forest Service event remove invasive spotted knapweed from an upland meadow on the Spruce Gulch Reserve. (Photo: Tim Seastedt)

Or help us advance research and education at Spruce Gulch Reserve by making a gift.

Thank you!