DOE extends funding for Bioenergy Research Center involving CSU scientists
The U.S. Department of Energy has renewed funding for the Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation, which counts several CSU researchers among its members.
The U.S. Department of Energy has renewed funding for the Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation, which counts several CSU researchers among its members.
A partnership between Colorado State University’s Center for Environmental Management of Military Lands and the Air Force Civil Engineer Center seeks to integrate data to help avoid Bird/Wildlife Aircraft Strike Hazards.
While wild horses on the nation’s public lands often elicit a romantic image of the West, these quickly growing herds have long faced problems associated with overpopulation. But results of a recent study offer a promising tool to help address those challenges.
Colorado State University researcher Dominique David-Chavez will testify before the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology for a hearing on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change on Thursday, April 28, at 8 a.m. MST.
In November 2020, Colorado voters approved Proposition 114, which mandated Colorado Parks and Wildlife develop a plan to start reintroducing gray wolves (Canis Lupus) to the western part of the state by 2023. The initiative passed narrowly with 50.9 percent of the Colorado public voting in favor.
Rebecca (Becky) Niemiec, an assistant professor in Colorado State University’s Department of Human Dimensions of Natural Resources, has been named manager of the state’s Bureau of Animal Protection program.
New research shows that orphaned juvenile elephants have less chance of survival in a herd.
An interdisciplinary group of Colorado State University researchers is part of a $15 million National Science Foundation research network created to enhance sustainability, equity and resilience in the Intermountain West.
CSU Assistant Professor Rebecca Niemiec is a principal investigator for this new project.
New research finds decreasing lit windows could reduce bird collisions by 60%.