2020 Warner graduate highlight: Nick Schrader
Five questions with 2020 Warner graduate Nick Schrader, Human Dimensions of Natural Resources
Five questions with 2020 Warner graduate Nick Schrader, Human Dimensions of Natural Resources
This high-level overview of the Spring 2021 semester is focused on how the semester will start.
After 25 years as a professor in the department of Ecosystem Science and Sustainability, Melinda Laituri finds her own pivotal moment as she retires from Colorado State University this fall.
On behalf of the entire Department of Human Dimensions of Natural Resources family, we would like to congratulate all 2020 graduates from our Natural Resource Tourism and Human Dimensions of Natural Resources majors! Although we can’t see each other in person, please know that we are all very proud of your accomplishments this year. Best of luck in all your future endeavors and take care!
Chemical and Biological Engineering Professor Brad Reisfeld has an EPA grant to build a sensor that will identify harmful algal blooms.
“If you asked me when I was graduating high school if this was possible, I wouldn’t have believed someone with my background could make these accomplishments. I’m showing my family and other people from similar backgrounds that this is a possibility.”
CSU researchers have discovered that wildlife values have changed because wildlife are being re-classified to be in the same moral community that includes humans. Their data shows a widespread shift from domination to mutualism wildlife values over a 14-year period since 2004.
Daniel Dominguez, a senior in the Warner College of Natural Resources, recently received a prestigious Marshall Scholarship.
Ecosystem Science and Sustainability assistant professor, Nathan Mueller, speaks to AG Journal about the importance of climate-resistant agriculture in the future of sustainability.