CSU team receives $150,000 gift from REI Cooperative Action Fund to start nature and well-being collective
A CSU team received a $150,000 gift from the REI Cooperative Action Fund to start a nature, human health, and well-being collective.
A CSU team received a $150,000 gift from the REI Cooperative Action Fund to start a nature, human health, and well-being collective.
Read about wildfire in a Q&A with Courtney Schultz. Schultz is a professor of natural resource and fire policy, director of the Public Lands Policy Group, and director of the Climate Adaptation Partnership, housed in the Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship in the Warner College of Natural Resources.
In a survey of 782 graduate students from 94 U.S. ecology and evolutionary biology programs, a Colorado State University research team found that nearly 40% had been sexually harassed during their graduate program.
Christian Narby grew up in the small mountain town of Basalt, Colorado surrounded by public lands and abundant wildlife. Throughout his childhood, Narby developed a deep fascination with the natural world.
The University houses an extraordinary array of research, education, and engagement activities to tackle the climate crisis. CSU experts are working on the interrelated challenges of climate change mitigation, which requires reducing greenhouse gas concentrations and emissions, and adaptation, which involves adjusting infrastructure, policy, and social systems to new conditions.
Colorado State University developed and leads a key component of the U.S. government’s greenhouse gas inventory, which informs policy and is instrumental for climate mitigation and negotiations.
After months of receiving name suggestions for the musk ox mount that now resides in the atrium of the Michael Smith Natural Resources building, the newest member of the Warner herd now has a name.
A workshop co-hosted by Colorado State University connected 23 wildlife officials from the Horn of Africa to collaborate on the conservation of cheetahs and other wildlife.
Colorado State University is creating a resource for policymakers and government agencies to help them solve and avoid problems related to interactions between animals and people.
A research team led by a Colorado State University scientist found that climate change will impact tropical forests’ ability to store carbon.