Q&A with Logan Bell, new Academic Success Coordinator
Meet Logan Bell, a new Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship advisor.
Meet Logan Bell, a new Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship advisor.
More than the mountain location made a forestry field measurement class held at the Colorado State University Mountain Campus special this summer — it was the first time the CSU course was taught by a group of women. The instructor team at CSU mountain campus for F230 over the summer: Heather Dannahower, Jamie Dahl, and Katarina Warnick
The Cross-Boundary Landscape Restoration Workshop explored collaborative efforts to restore and reimagine fire-adapted forest landscapes.
Extractive and industrial development projects threaten the fundamental rights of Indigenous Peoples, according to a new study co-authored by Colorado State University Assistant Professor Dominique David-Chavez.
Congratulations to all of these award winners and nominees for these highly deserved awards and for your service to FRS, Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University, and your communities. These awards would not be possible without the efforts of nominators who take the time to help highlight their colleagues.
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.
Zoe Lipscomb is receiving a B.S. degree in Ecosystem Science and Sustainability from the Warner College of Natural Resources. She worked in Troy Ocheltree’s plant ecophysiology laboratory while at Colorado State University and plans to combine her love for working with people with her passion for rural communities.
Esme Wissinger is receiving their B.S. in Forest and Rangeland Stewardship with a concentration in Forest Management from the Warner College of Natural Resources. Esme worked at the Environmental Learning Center during their time at Colorado State University and found joy in communicating with people of all ages about natural resources.
Read a Q&A with Angelika Helmer, a student graduating from the Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship with B.S. degrees in forest management and natural resources management and a minor in ecological restoration. Angelika served the department as a peer advisor, offering support and guidance to other students.
Camille Stevens-Rumann is an assistant professor of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship at Colorado State University and assistant director of the Colorado Forest Restoration Institute. Her research focuses on post-disturbance recovery and challenges facing disturbed lands, whether that is understanding species and ecosystem responses to disturbances or applications for improving future ecosystem management.