Tag: "Warner Research"
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Avoid eating sea turtle meat if you want to cut toxic heavy metals from your diet
Research suggests that public health campaigns could be the solution to sea turtle conservation.
Elephants may have names for each other, study suggests
Michael Pardo, an affiliate for Colorado State University’s Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, shares his research on a groundbreaking new study which explains how wild African elephants are capable of communicating.
Waterhole superspreaders: Cattle can spread disease to wildlife at water sources
As climate change drives higher temperatures and water scarcity, disease transmission between livestock and wildlife at shared resources is on the rise. Colorado State University research suggests that resource management and parasite treatment can help mitigate parasite transmission between cattle and wild herbivores.
How do mountains form?
Sean Gallen, a geomorphologist at CSU, recently shared his ideas explaining how delamination contributes to high elevations in a Live Science article, “How do mountains form?” New findings by geologists concerning tectonic plates and the formation of mountains are highlighted in this article.
FWCB professor emeritus honors Japanese colleague in winning International Prize for Biology
Kurt Fausch, professor emeritus in the Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology made is 20th trip to Japan in December to honor a colleague at the 38th International Prize for Biology.
Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory’s Jill Baron awarded prestigious Presidential Rank Award
Jill Baron received a 2022 Presidential Rank Award for her work and leadership as a scientist and civil servant.
CSU researcher part of Indigenous climate resilience science hub
Dominique David-Chavez, assistant professor of Indigenous Natural Resource Stewardship in the Forest and Rangeland Stewardship Department and director of the Indigenous Land and Data Stewards laboratory at Colorado State University, will work with coastal communities in Borikén (Puerto Rico) to support community-based climate research as part of a five-year $20 million grant from the National Science Foundation.
Researchers collaborate on prescribed fire science
Colorado State University researcher Chad Hoffman is among many researchers who provide scientists and land managers scientific support for the safe and effective use of prescribed fire, a common management tool used to reduce the negative impacts of wildfire and meet ecological objectives.
CSU fire expertise on display at national meeting
CSU is beginning to answer new questions in the wildland fire conversation.
Dinosaur National Monument unites CSU’s ‘range’ of expertise
A new National Park Service project is tapping into Colorado State University’s strengths in rangeland stewardship.