Tag: "Graduate Degree Program in Ecology"
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CSU faculty contribute to most comprehensive assessment of climate change in U.S.
Four Colorado State University faculty members co-authored chapters in the Fifth National Climate Assessment, a state-of-the-science, congressionally mandated report intended to inform decision-making.
CSU research team finds sexual harassment in U.S. ecology and evolution graduate programs disproportionally affects students with marginalized identities
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.
Bowser, Funk, Laituri named Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
AAAS is the world’s largest multidisciplinary scientific society and publisher of the Science family of journals.
Q&A: Four women making change at Warner College
In honor of Women's History Month, celebrated annually in the month of March, we highlight four women in the Warner College of Natural Resources who are making change to create opportunity, invite and celebrate diversity and lend their voices to the natural resources fields.
Caitlin Charlton: WCNR Women Making Change
In honor of Women's History Month, a Q&A with CSU graduate student Caitlin Charlton to highlight women in the Warner College who are making change to create opportunity, invite and celebrate diversity and lend their voices to the natural resources fields.
New research discovers longer-term effects on elephants from poaching
New research shows that orphaned juvenile elephants have less chance of survival in a herd.
Women, parents and early-career faculty in ecology most impacted by COVID‐19
Female faculty and early-career researchers were most impacted by the pandemic.
Warner Rams receive NSF Graduate Research Fellowships
Graduate students are set to embark on new lines of environmental research.
Underrepresented faculty play an uneven role in advancing diversity and inclusion, study finds
A survey of faculty members by researchers at Colorado State University has found that respondents who participated in diversity and inclusion activities at the highest levels were more likely to identify themselves as non-white, non-male or the first generation in their family to attend college.
Hunger guides mountain lions’ actions to enter residential areas
A new study found that while predators like mountain lions are generally fearful of and avoid humans, hunger can dampen that fear.