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The Ecology Center's Patrick Belmont (WATS, Department Head) and Roslyn McCann (ENVS) and other researchers investigate why universities are not better at committing to effective climate action policies on campuses.
Campus Climate: New Publication Proposes Framework for Higher-Ed Greenhouse Gas Accountability

Campus Climate: New Publication Proposes Framework for Higher-Ed Greenhouse Gas Accountability

The Ecology Center's Patrick Belmont (WATS, Department Head) and Roslyn McCann (ENVS) and other researchers investigate why universities are not better at committing to effective climate action policies on campuses.

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WILD and Ecology Center researcher David Stoner shares information and advice about mountain lions and when they share space with humans in developed areas.
USU Expert Shares Mountain Lion Advice After Cougar Spotted Near Campus

USU Expert Shares Mountain Lion Advice After Cougar Spotted Near Campus

WILD and Ecology Center researcher David Stoner shares information and advice about mountain lions and when they share space with humans in developed areas.

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Recent research by Ecology Center faculty affiliate Janice Brahney shows that dust from the atmosphere acts like a fertilizer for algae, broadening its growth tolerance. Microscopic algae are the foundation of freshwater systems, but recent shifts from cl
New Research Finds That Dust in Atmosphere is Feeding Algae in Mountain Lakes

New Research Finds That Dust in Atmosphere is Feeding Algae in Mountain Lakes

Recent research by Ecology Center faculty affiliate Janice Brahney shows that dust from the atmosphere acts like a fertilizer for algae, broadening its growth tolerance. Microscopic algae are the foundation of freshwater systems, but recent shifts from cl...

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USU ecologist Moria Robinson, assistant professor in the Department of Biology and Ecology Center, is lead author of a Nov. 10 paper in Science exploring how and why patterns in plant-herbivore interactions vary across the globe.
Unequal Impacts: USU Ecologist Explores Variability in Plant, Herbivore Interactions

Unequal Impacts: USU Ecologist Explores Variability in Plant, Herbivore Interactions

USU ecologist Moria Robinson, assistant professor in the Department of Biology and Ecology Center, is lead author of a Nov. 10 paper in Science exploring how and why patterns in plant-herbivore interactions vary across the globe.

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Utah's variable topography produces a tremendous range of wildfire behavior, according to new research from WILD and Ecology Center faculty member Jim Lutz and others.
Strange Burn: New Research Identifies Unique Patterns in Utah Wildfires

Strange Burn: New Research Identifies Unique Patterns in Utah Wildfires

Utah's variable topography produces a tremendous range of wildfire behavior, according to new research from WILD and Ecology Center faculty member Jim Lutz and others.

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The Biden-Harris Administration released the Fifth National Climate Assessment this week, which was authored by researchers across the United States, including the Ecology Center and QCNR's own Mark Brunson and Peter Howe.
Latest National Climate Report Taps Expertise of Two QCNR Faculty

Latest National Climate Report Taps Expertise of Two QCNR Faculty

The Biden-Harris Administration released the Fifth National Climate Assessment this week, which was authored by researchers across the United States, including the Ecology Center and QCNR's own Mark Brunson and Peter Howe.

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A team from the Department of Watershed Sciences in the Quinney College of Natural Resources and the Ecology Center identified several factors to help answer the fundamental ecological question of what factors drive animal diversity.
Raining Cats and Dogs: Research Finds Global Precipitation Patterns a Driver for Animal Diversity

Raining Cats and Dogs: Research Finds Global Precipitation Patterns a Driver for Animal Diversity

A team from the Department of Watershed Sciences in the Quinney College of Natural Resources and the Ecology Center identified several factors to help answer the fundamental ecological question of what factors drive animal diversity.

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Peter Adler will be succeeding Nancy Huntly as director of the Ecology Center at Utah State University.
Ecological Evolution: Transition Pending for Leadership at USU Ecology Center

Ecological Evolution: Transition Pending for Leadership at USU Ecology Center

Peter Adler will be succeeding Nancy Huntly as director of the Ecology Center at Utah State University.

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Ecology_News
Utah State University scientists Brennan Bean and Wei Zhang are among researchers investigating how to determine precautions needed in a changing climate related to heavy snowfall in a project titled "Understanding the Evolving Threat of Snow Loads and Ra
Recipe for Safety: USU Scientists Receive NOAA Grant to Study Extreme Snow Loads

Recipe for Safety: USU Scientists Receive NOAA Grant to Study Extreme Snow Loads

Utah State University scientists Brennan Bean and Wei Zhang are among researchers investigating how to determine precautions needed in a changing climate related to heavy snowfall in a project titled "Understanding the Evolving Threat of Snow Loads and Ra...

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Research by Eric Thacker and Kari Veblen is finding that transplanting mature, local sagebrush, though more expensive, may have better chances at survival than seeds or seedlings.
New Research Tracks Successes for Transplanting Full-Sized Mountain Big Sagebrush

New Research Tracks Successes for Transplanting Full-Sized Mountain Big Sagebrush

Research by Eric Thacker and Kari Veblen is finding that transplanting mature, local sagebrush, though more expensive, may have better chances at survival than seeds or seedlings.

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Ecology_News
New research by WILD and the Ecology Center's Yong Zhou and his team from Yale University, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of Cape Town, Texas A&M, Kruger National Park, Harvard University, and University of Oregon shows that in addition
Capturing Carbon in Savannas: New Research Examines Role of Grasses for Controlling Climate Change

Capturing Carbon in Savannas: New Research Examines Role of Grasses for Controlling Climate Change

New research by WILD and the Ecology Center's Yong Zhou and his team from Yale University, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of Cape Town, Texas A&M, Kruger National Park, Harvard University, and University of Oregon shows that in addition...

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The UPR Science Reporter and Ecology PhD Candidate Erin Lewis reports on research showing how rising temperatures contribute to declining air quality in Utah and across the country.
Rising temperatures contribute to worsening air quality

Rising temperatures contribute to worsening air quality

The UPR Science Reporter and Ecology PhD Candidate Erin Lewis reports on research showing how rising temperatures contribute to declining air quality in Utah and across the country.

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An article in the Herald Journal highlights research by ENVS and Ecology Center faculty Peter Howe and other contributing researchers on how Utahn's perceptions and opinions of climate change and whether exhibited changes are human-induced.
Research Indicates a Change in How Utahn's Perceive Climate Change

Research Indicates a Change in How Utahn's Perceive Climate Change

An article in the Herald Journal highlights research by ENVS and Ecology Center faculty Peter Howe and other contributing researchers on how Utahn's perceptions and opinions of climate change and whether exhibited changes are human-induced.

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USU Ecology PhD candidate Savannah Adkins says soils remove some 25 percent of annual carbon dioxide produced by fossil fuel burning from Earth’s atmosphere and could potentially remove as much as 35 percent of total greenhouse gases. Eliminating that muc
One Size Doesn't Fit All: No Universal Soil Response to Nitrogen Deposition Says USU Ecologist

One Size Doesn't Fit All: No Universal Soil Response to Nitrogen Deposition Says USU Ecologist

USU Ecology PhD candidate Savannah Adkins says soils remove some 25 percent of annual carbon dioxide produced by fossil fuel burning from Earth’s atmosphere and could potentially remove as much as 35 percent of total greenhouse gases. Eliminating that muc...

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USU ecologist Jessica Murray studies soil canopies in tropical montane forests of Costa Rica. The doctoral candidate published findings in the journal 'Geoderma' and presents at the 2023 ESA meeting.
In the Treetops: USU Ecology Doctoral Student Studies Canopy Soil Abundance, Chemistry

In the Treetops: USU Ecology Doctoral Student Studies Canopy Soil Abundance, Chemistry

USU ecologist Jessica Murray studies soil canopies in tropical montane forests of Costa Rica. The doctoral candidate published findings in the journal 'Geoderma' and presents at the 2023 ESA meeting.

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A new publication by Jack Schmidt, chair of the Center for Colorado River Studies in the Quinney College of Natural Resources, Charles Yackulic of the USGS Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center, and Eric Kuhn, retired general manager of the Colorado
Crisis on the Colorado: New Analysis Charts Hard Choices for a Drying River

Crisis on the Colorado: New Analysis Charts Hard Choices for a Drying River

A new publication by Jack Schmidt, chair of the Center for Colorado River Studies in the Quinney College of Natural Resources, Charles Yackulic of the USGS Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center, and Eric Kuhn, retired general manager of the Colorado...

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Ecology_News
UPR receives 14 Society of Professional Journalism awards, four of which were awarded to the Ecology Center's own Aimee Van Tatenhove and Ellis Juhlin
UPR takes home 14 Society of Professional Journalism awards

UPR takes home 14 Society of Professional Journalism awards

UPR receives 14 Society of Professional Journalism awards, four of which were awarded to the Ecology Center's own Aimee Van Tatenhove and Ellis Juhlin

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In some places rain is changing — it is falling less often, but with more intensity. New research is deciphering which plants will might thrive and survive under these new conditions, and it often depends on their roots.
Thirsty Roots: Identifying Plant Winners, Losers Under Changing Climate

Thirsty Roots: Identifying Plant Winners, Losers Under Changing Climate

In some places rain is changing — it is falling less often, but with more intensity. New research is deciphering which plants will might thrive and survive under these new conditions, and it often depends on their roots.

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Jennifer Reeve, associate professor of organic and sustainable agriculture, and Matt Yost, associate professor, Ecology Center faculty associate, and agroclimate Extension specialist, hope to find out how much carbon is pulled from the atmosphere by carbo
Carbon farming has garnered increasing attention as a way to reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Carbon farming has garnered increasing attention as a way to reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Jennifer Reeve, associate professor of organic and sustainable agriculture, and Matt Yost, associate professor, Ecology Center faculty associate, and agroclimate Extension specialist, hope to find out how much carbon is pulled from the atmosphere by carbo...

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Ecology_News
Ecology PhD student Valerie Martin (BIOL) is featured in this Herald Journal article about protecting pollinating species in Cache Valley.
Local ecologists encourage community members to help protect pollinators

Local ecologists encourage community members to help protect pollinators

Ecology PhD student Valerie Martin (BIOL) is featured in this Herald Journal article about protecting pollinating species in Cache Valley.

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USU doctoral student Emily Calhoun, left, with faculty mentor Norah Saarman, examines a mosquito under a microscope. The pair received a CDC-supported grant to study the insect's resistance to common pest prevention efforts.
USU Ecologists Receive CDC-Supported Grant to Study Insecticide Resistance in Mosquitoes

USU Ecologists Receive CDC-Supported Grant to Study Insecticide Resistance in Mosquitoes

USU doctoral student Emily Calhoun, left, with faculty mentor Norah Saarman, examines a mosquito under a microscope. The pair received a CDC-supported grant to study the insect's resistance to common pest prevention efforts.

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USU researchers return to Alaska this summer to evaluate long-term vegetative changes in the wake of a 70-year storm.
Salt on Frost: Researchers Recording Impact of Once-in-a-Lifetime Storm on Alaska Coast

Salt on Frost: Researchers Recording Impact of Once-in-a-Lifetime Storm on Alaska Coast

USU researchers return to Alaska this summer to evaluate long-term vegetative changes in the wake of a 70-year storm.

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To capture a better picture of human impacts on a wickedly interconnected ecological system, researchers are looking at a footprint measurement that starts at the sun.
Counting the Cost of Sunshine: Finding a Better Metric to Measure Human Ecological Footprints

Counting the Cost of Sunshine: Finding a Better Metric to Measure Human Ecological Footprints

To capture a better picture of human impacts on a wickedly interconnected ecological system, researchers are looking at a footprint measurement that starts at the sun.

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The Great Salt Lake Collaborative has created an interactive website to help Utahns understand the critical role Great Salt Lake and its wetlands play in the ecosystem that is crucial to 10 million birds.
Water for Wildlife: Dire consequences of a shrinking Great Salt Lake

Water for Wildlife: Dire consequences of a shrinking Great Salt Lake

The Great Salt Lake Collaborative has created an interactive website to help Utahns understand the critical role Great Salt Lake and its wetlands play in the ecosystem that is crucial to 10 million birds.

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Researchers don’t yet know much about how SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) moves through animal populations. Kezia Manlove from the Quinney College of Natural Resources and Ecology Center is working to change that.
Buck Trends: USU Researcher Tracking COVID-19 Virus in Utah's Mule Deer Populations

Buck Trends: USU Researcher Tracking COVID-19 Virus in Utah's Mule Deer Populations

Researchers don’t yet know much about how SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) moves through animal populations. Kezia Manlove from the Quinney College of Natural Resources and Ecology Center is working to change that.

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USU experts and Ecology/CAS faculty Bethany Neilson and Sarah Null discuss how water shepherding could work to translate conservation efforts into real benefits for Utah’s landscape.
Water Shepherding: USU Experts Discuss How to Ensure Conserved Water Gets to the Great Salt Lake

Water Shepherding: USU Experts Discuss How to Ensure Conserved Water Gets to the Great Salt Lake

USU experts and Ecology/CAS faculty Bethany Neilson and Sarah Null discuss how water shepherding could work to translate conservation efforts into real benefits for Utah’s landscape.

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Utah State University Blanding and Utah State University Moab will host the art exhibit Sentinels, presented by the Last Glacial Collective. The exhibit is a collaboration of artists that worked to present their concern for the global future through artis
USU Blanding and Moab to Host 'Sentinels' Art Exhibit

USU Blanding and Moab to Host 'Sentinels' Art Exhibit

Utah State University Blanding and Utah State University Moab will host the art exhibit Sentinels, presented by the Last Glacial Collective. The exhibit is a collaboration of artists that worked to present their concern for the global future through artis...

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Ecology_News
The Western U.S. is a hotspot for studying climate change impacts on the hydrological or water cycle. Despite lower-than-average total precipitation in 2021, the contrasting dryness and wetness in the Western U.S. has been widely described as a “precipita
Human Activities May Have Boosted the West's 'Precipitation Roller Coaster'

Human Activities May Have Boosted the West's 'Precipitation Roller Coaster'

The Western U.S. is a hotspot for studying climate change impacts on the hydrological or water cycle. Despite lower-than-average total precipitation in 2021, the contrasting dryness and wetness in the Western U.S. has been widely described as a “precipita...

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Ecology_News
Authors of a new report on the Great Salt Lake do not mince words — without major intervention, they say, the Great Salt Lake could disappear within five years.
Utah With No Great Salt Lake? Report Warns of Lake's Ultimate Demise Without Action

Utah With No Great Salt Lake? Report Warns of Lake's Ultimate Demise Without Action

Authors of a new report on the Great Salt Lake do not mince words — without major intervention, they say, the Great Salt Lake could disappear within five years.

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Chris Luecke, Ecology faculty and previous dean of the S. J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources, announced his retirement from USU beginning January 2023.
Chris Luecke Announces Retirement

Chris Luecke Announces Retirement

Chris Luecke, Ecology faculty and previous dean of the S. J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources, announced his retirement from USU beginning January 2023.

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Jeanette Norton has received the Soil Science Society of America's highest honor
USU Professor Jeanette Norton Named Fellow of the Soil Science Society of America

USU Professor Jeanette Norton Named Fellow of the Soil Science Society of America

Jeanette Norton has received the Soil Science Society of America's highest honor

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In newly published research, Joshua Carrell, Edd Hammill and Thomas Edwards from the Quinney College of Natural Resources are mapping out strategies so that an emerging demand for proposed energy development projects and the survival of Colorado Plateau’s
Mapping the Middle Ground: Balancing Mining Activities With Survival of Utah's Rare Plants

Mapping the Middle Ground: Balancing Mining Activities With Survival of Utah's Rare Plants

In newly published research, Joshua Carrell, Edd Hammill and Thomas Edwards from the Quinney College of Natural Resources are mapping out strategies so that an emerging demand for proposed energy development projects and the survival of Colorado Plateau’s...

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Given the West’s increased focus on water conservation, experts on the front lines of our water worries say we’ve left out an important part of the discussion: huge swaths of data about water supply and demand are missing as indicated by research from Dr.
Measure to Manage: Water Solutions Begin with Better Data

Measure to Manage: Water Solutions Begin with Better Data

Given the West’s increased focus on water conservation, experts on the front lines of our water worries say we’ve left out an important part of the discussion: huge swaths of data about water supply and demand are missing as indicated by research from Dr....

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Dr. Peter Adler (WILD) and Ph.D. candidate Michael Stemkovski investigate how a changing climate is transforming vegetation across landscapes in the West.
Catching Up to Climate Change: Researchers Track Big-Picture Patterns in Plant Transformations

Catching Up to Climate Change: Researchers Track Big-Picture Patterns in Plant Transformations

Dr. Peter Adler (WILD) and Ph.D. candidate Michael Stemkovski investigate how a changing climate is transforming vegetation across landscapes in the West.

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Ecology_News
Sasha Reed, USGS Ecologist and friend of the USU Ecology Center and CAS program, is highlighted in the Salt Lake Tribune regarding her research on biocrust outside of Castle Valley
Scientists in Moab are working to understand how climate change will impact desert biocrusts

Scientists in Moab are working to understand how climate change will impact desert biocrusts

Sasha Reed, USGS Ecologist and friend of the USU Ecology Center and CAS program, is highlighted in the Salt Lake Tribune regarding her research on biocrust outside of Castle Valley

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Ecology_News
How did the world’s largest sand island, K’gari, the indigenous name for eastern Australia’s Fraser Island, along with the Great Barrier Reef, the world’s largest coral reef, come to be? Little is known about the formation of these UNESCO World Heritage-l
USU Geoscientist says Sea-Level Changes Formed Australia's K'gari Sand Island, Great Barrier Reef

USU Geoscientist says Sea-Level Changes Formed Australia's K'gari Sand Island, Great Barrier Reef

How did the world’s largest sand island, K’gari, the indigenous name for eastern Australia’s Fraser Island, along with the Great Barrier Reef, the world’s largest coral reef, come to be? Little is known about the formation of these UNESCO World Heritage-l...

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Ecology_News
New research by our own Dan Macnulty and others shows that wolf coat color may signal resistance to canine distemper virus, enabling the animals to identify partners that can offer a chance at disease-resistant offspring.
New Research Finds Color of Wolf Coat a Signal for Immunity to Distemper Virus

New Research Finds Color of Wolf Coat a Signal for Immunity to Distemper Virus

New research by our own Dan Macnulty and others shows that wolf coat color may signal resistance to canine distemper virus, enabling the animals to identify partners that can offer a chance at disease-resistant offspring.

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tah State University professor Ricardo Ramirez is an Aggie through and through. “I should note Ricardo began his undergraduate studies as a New Mexico State University Aggie and, later, as a postdoc, was a Texas A&M University Aggie,” said USU Science De
First-Generation College Graduate Honored as USU Inaugural Professor

First-Generation College Graduate Honored as USU Inaugural Professor

tah State University professor Ricardo Ramirez is an Aggie through and through. “I should note Ricardo began his undergraduate studies as a New Mexico State University Aggie and, later, as a postdoc, was a Texas A&M University Aggie,” said USU Science De...

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Evolution can repeat itself, says Utah State University alum Samridhi Chaturvedi PhD’19, resulting in parallel adaptations in independent lineages occupying similar environments. Consider the plant-eating stick insect Timema: Multiple species of the genus
USU Ecologists Ask 'Why Does Evolution Sometimes Repeat Itself?'

USU Ecologists Ask 'Why Does Evolution Sometimes Repeat Itself?'

Evolution can repeat itself, says Utah State University alum Samridhi Chaturvedi PhD’19, resulting in parallel adaptations in independent lineages occupying similar environments. Consider the plant-eating stick insect Timema: Multiple species of the genus...

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Ecology_News
USU evolutionary ecologist Joseph Wilson and colleagues "think like predators" to study mimicry among North American bumble bees. They report findings in the open access journal "Scientific Reports."
What You See: USU Ecologist Uses Human Perception to Define Bumble Bee Mimicry

What You See: USU Ecologist Uses Human Perception to Define Bumble Bee Mimicry

USU evolutionary ecologist Joseph Wilson and colleagues "think like predators" to study mimicry among North American bumble bees. They report findings in the open access journal "Scientific Reports."

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Researchers at Utah State University are creating a new hydrologic information system that will generate important new insight about the nation’s water resources.
USU Engineering Researchers Launch First Project Under New Water Institute

USU Engineering Researchers Launch First Project Under New Water Institute

Researchers at Utah State University are creating a new hydrologic information system that will generate important new insight about the nation’s water resources.

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The Moab Sun News published an article highlighting the sustainable ranching research work of USU faculty and two USU PhD students: CAS trainee and ENVS student Will Munger and Ecology student Maria Stahl.
Science Moab: Building beefy sustainability plans

Science Moab: Building beefy sustainability plans

The Moab Sun News published an article highlighting the sustainable ranching research work of USU faculty and two USU PhD students: CAS trainee and ENVS student Will Munger and Ecology student Maria Stahl.

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Ecology_News
In August, the Great Salt Lake State Park’s marina was closed due to low water levels. In late September, the U.S. Geological Survey’s Saltair Lake Elevation Gage could “no longer measure accurate water levels” for that same reason. These are both symptom
'Promising Options': USU Researcher Investigating Water Conservation Methods for Great Salt Lake

'Promising Options': USU Researcher Investigating Water Conservation Methods for Great Salt Lake

In August, the Great Salt Lake State Park’s marina was closed due to low water levels. In late September, the U.S. Geological Survey’s Saltair Lake Elevation Gage could “no longer measure accurate water levels” for that same reason. These are both symptom...

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The cause-effect sequence or “feedback” between plants and their soil microbial communities plays an important role in structuring plant communities. To predict this synergistic coexistence, researchers conduct short-term, pairwise experiments — measuring
Out of the Loop: USU Ecologist Says Short-Term Plant-Soil Feedback Experiments May Fall Short

Out of the Loop: USU Ecologist Says Short-Term Plant-Soil Feedback Experiments May Fall Short

The cause-effect sequence or “feedback” between plants and their soil microbial communities plays an important role in structuring plant communities. To predict this synergistic coexistence, researchers conduct short-term, pairwise experiments — measuring...

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Ecology_News
Starved for freshwater, the Great Salt Lake is getting saltier. The lake is losing sources of freshwater input to agriculture, urban growth and drought, and the drawdown is causing salt concentrations to spike beyond even the tolerance of brine shrimp and
Great Salt Lake on Path to Hyper-Salinity, Mirroring Iranian Lake, New Research Shows

Great Salt Lake on Path to Hyper-Salinity, Mirroring Iranian Lake, New Research Shows

Starved for freshwater, the Great Salt Lake is getting saltier. The lake is losing sources of freshwater input to agriculture, urban growth and drought, and the drawdown is causing salt concentrations to spike beyond even the tolerance of brine shrimp and...

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Ecology_News
With record high temperatures scorching Utah into September this year and crushing previous years’ records, the effect of excess carbon in Earth’s atmosphere is impossible to ignore. Carbon sequestration — or locking carbon into soils — is the main driver
USU Soil & Plant Scientists Part of $15M Project to Study Carbon Farming

USU Soil & Plant Scientists Part of $15M Project to Study Carbon Farming

With record high temperatures scorching Utah into September this year and crushing previous years’ records, the effect of excess carbon in Earth’s atmosphere is impossible to ignore. Carbon sequestration — or locking carbon into soils — is the main driver...

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Ecology_News
A well-designed fence can help to prevent conflicts with carnivores, but with so many options for material, placement and logistics, researchers can struggle to identify what strategies have the best chance for success. They turned to ranchers for help.
On the Fence: New Research Taps Rancher Expertise on Living With Carnivores

On the Fence: New Research Taps Rancher Expertise on Living With Carnivores

A well-designed fence can help to prevent conflicts with carnivores, but with so many options for material, placement and logistics, researchers can struggle to identify what strategies have the best chance for success. They turned to ranchers for help.

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It’s ancient, it’s massive, and it is faltering. The gargantuan aspen stand dubbed “Pando,” located in south-central Utah, is more than 100 acres of quivering, genetically identical plant life, thought to be the largest living organism on earth (based on
Pando in Pieces: Understanding the New Breach in the World's Largest Living Thing

Pando in Pieces: Understanding the New Breach in the World's Largest Living Thing

It’s ancient, it’s massive, and it is faltering. The gargantuan aspen stand dubbed “Pando,” located in south-central Utah, is more than 100 acres of quivering, genetically identical plant life, thought to be the largest living organism on earth (based on ...

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Karin Kettenring, WATS and Ecology Center faculty, and her lab members discuss their work which is replacing the invasive phragmites with native plants in the wetlands around the Great Salt Lake.
USU Scientists Share Successes in Great Salt Lake Wetlands Replacing Phragmites With Native Plants

USU Scientists Share Successes in Great Salt Lake Wetlands Replacing Phragmites With Native Plants

Karin Kettenring, WATS and Ecology Center faculty, and her lab members discuss their work which is replacing the invasive phragmites with native plants in the wetlands around the Great Salt Lake.

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USU welcomes Dr. Carl Rothfels as Director of the Intermountain Herbarium
USU/BIOL welcomes new Director for the Intermountain Herbarium

USU/BIOL welcomes new Director for the Intermountain Herbarium

USU welcomes Dr. Carl Rothfels as Director of the Intermountain Herbarium

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Ask any landowner their opinion of beaver working in streams and rivers on a property, and you’ll likely get a mixed reaction. Beaver are, after all, powerhouse workers that could potentially have major — and sometimes problematic — impacts on a landscape
USU Center Relocates Beaver as Land Managers See Benefits of Rodents' Residence

USU Center Relocates Beaver as Land Managers See Benefits of Rodents' Residence

Ask any landowner their opinion of beaver working in streams and rivers on a property, and you’ll likely get a mixed reaction. Beaver are, after all, powerhouse workers that could potentially have major — and sometimes problematic — impacts on a landscape...

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For more than two decades trends for above-normal temperatures and below-normal rainfall have ruled the West. Official maps are painted in wide swaths with angry red and dark-red stripes — category markers for extreme and exceptional water shortages. Wate
Facing Down Drought in the West

Facing Down Drought in the West

For more than two decades trends for above-normal temperatures and below-normal rainfall have ruled the West. Official maps are painted in wide swaths with angry red and dark-red stripes — category markers for extreme and exceptional water shortages. Wate...

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Dust from the drying lakebeds threatens the health of millions of people nearby. The remaining water is saltier and less hospitable to life — potentially killing off once robust Artemia (brine shrimp) populations. Fewer birds and visitors flock to its sho
Uniting to Save Saline Lakes

Uniting to Save Saline Lakes

Dust from the drying lakebeds threatens the health of millions of people nearby. The remaining water is saltier and less hospitable to life — potentially killing off once robust Artemia (brine shrimp) populations. Fewer birds and visitors flock to its sho...

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Ecology_News
A recent article in The Atlantic highlights research done by our own Paul Rogers
The Bigger This Fungus Gets, the Worse We’re Doing

The Bigger This Fungus Gets, the Worse We’re Doing

A recent article in The Atlantic highlights research done by our own Paul Rogers

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Ecology_News
Michelle Baker, professor in the Department of Biology and the USU Ecology Center, has been selected to serve as dean of Utah State University’s College of Science.
Michelle Baker Named USU Science Dean

Michelle Baker Named USU Science Dean

Michelle Baker, professor in the Department of Biology and the USU Ecology Center, has been selected to serve as dean of Utah State University’s College of Science.

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Ecology_News
Research tracking the flight habits of American white pelicans could make it safer for aircraft to take to the skies. Research by Ecology student Aimee Van Tatenhove focuses on this issue.
Flying the Friendly Skies: Working to Reduce Bird-Airplane Collisions

Flying the Friendly Skies: Working to Reduce Bird-Airplane Collisions

Research tracking the flight habits of American white pelicans could make it safer for aircraft to take to the skies. Research by Ecology student Aimee Van Tatenhove focuses on this issue.

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Utah State University physiological ecologist Susannah French is studying the effects of human-induced changes on varied lizards, including iguanas of the world’s tropics and, closer to home, the American Southwest’s side-blotched lizard.
Under Pressure: USU Ecologist Studies Animal Interactions in Changing Environments

Under Pressure: USU Ecologist Studies Animal Interactions in Changing Environments

Utah State University physiological ecologist Susannah French is studying the effects of human-induced changes on varied lizards, including iguanas of the world’s tropics and, closer to home, the American Southwest’s side-blotched lizard.

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The Raramuri Criollo cattle are easy to identify, once spotted in the pastures at the Canyonlands Research Center: they’re smaller than the typical Red Angus cattle, and have tall, curved horns. They’re descendants of the cattle that were introduced to th
Criollo cattle could save ranching

Criollo cattle could save ranching

The Raramuri Criollo cattle are easy to identify, once spotted in the pastures at the Canyonlands Research Center: they’re smaller than the typical Red Angus cattle, and have tall, curved horns. They’re descendants of the cattle that were introduced to th...

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Sublette County cattle and sheep are part of across-the-West depredation reduction demonstration project attempting to ward off predators using motion-triggered LED lights fitted to livestock ear tags. Features research by our own Julie Young
Moo calves disco up the Green River, griz and wolves not invited

Moo calves disco up the Green River, griz and wolves not invited

Sublette County cattle and sheep are part of across-the-West depredation reduction demonstration project attempting to ward off predators using motion-triggered LED lights fitted to livestock ear tags. Features research by our own Julie Young

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Ecology_News
New research from WILD faculty Erica Stuber et al. examines the accuracy of information produced by citizen science apps for monitoring bird populations and found that it could actually offer a lot of utility for researchers. (Tim Lumley photo)
Poll the Audience: Using Data From Citizen Science to Keep Wild Birds in Flight

Poll the Audience: Using Data From Citizen Science to Keep Wild Birds in Flight

New research from WILD faculty Erica Stuber et al. examines the accuracy of information produced by citizen science apps for monitoring bird populations and found that it could actually offer a lot of utility for researchers. (Tim Lumley photo)

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There’s something utterly bewitching about the sound of steak dropping onto a hot, oiled skillet. Or maybe it’s the umami scent of a bacon-topped burger sizzling on the grill, wrapped in smoke and flame. Or perhaps your preference is a perfectly peppered
Real Beef. Done Well. An Eco-Friendlier Meal Using ‘Smart Foodscapes’

Real Beef. Done Well. An Eco-Friendlier Meal Using ‘Smart Foodscapes’

There’s something utterly bewitching about the sound of steak dropping onto a hot, oiled skillet. Or maybe it’s the umami scent of a bacon-topped burger sizzling on the grill, wrapped in smoke and flame. Or perhaps your preference is a perfectly peppered ...

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It is projected that 12 percent of all plastic waste ends up in aquatic environments. There is growing recognition that tiny microplastics are moving directly from the atmosphere into the world's oceans and back again in a two-way exchange.
Out of Sight & Mind: Quantifying Pervasive Microplastics in the Ocean-Atmosphere Cycle

Out of Sight & Mind: Quantifying Pervasive Microplastics in the Ocean-Atmosphere Cycle

It is projected that 12 percent of all plastic waste ends up in aquatic environments. There is growing recognition that tiny microplastics are moving directly from the atmosphere into the world's oceans and back again in a two-way exchange.

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The Pando aspen clone and the associated research of our own Paul Rogers is highlighted in a special feature in National Geographic.
The biggest living thing on Earth is being nibbled to death. Can it be saved?

The biggest living thing on Earth is being nibbled to death. Can it be saved?

The Pando aspen clone and the associated research of our own Paul Rogers is highlighted in a special feature in National Geographic.

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Sixteen Aggies, including Ecology majors Courtney Check (Fellow), Emily Burgess (Honorable Mention), and Maria Stahl (Honorable Mention) are named 2022 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellows or receive honorable mention from competitive STE
Research Excellence: Sixteen Aggies Honored in NSF Grad Research Fellow Search

Research Excellence: Sixteen Aggies Honored in NSF Grad Research Fellow Search

Sixteen Aggies, including Ecology majors Courtney Check (Fellow), Emily Burgess (Honorable Mention), and Maria Stahl (Honorable Mention) are named 2022 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellows or receive honorable mention from competitive STE...

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Listen to a UPR UnDisciplined piece featuring our own Patrick Belmont and Jordan Smith as they discuss the future of ski resorts in the face of decreasing snowpack due to climate change
UnDisciplined: what will happen to Utah's 'greatest snow' when there's no more snow?

UnDisciplined: what will happen to Utah's 'greatest snow' when there's no more snow?

Listen to a UPR UnDisciplined piece featuring our own Patrick Belmont and Jordan Smith as they discuss the future of ski resorts in the face of decreasing snowpack due to climate change

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Trees have a complex relationship with snow and energy as the season warms up, but new research shows that big trees can protect melting snowpacks in water-stressed environments.
Snowbound: Big Trees Boost Water in Forests by Protecting Snowpack

Snowbound: Big Trees Boost Water in Forests by Protecting Snowpack

Trees have a complex relationship with snow and energy as the season warms up, but new research shows that big trees can protect melting snowpacks in water-stressed environments.

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In 1990-1991, USU Moab professor Wayne Freimund participated in a research project at Arches National Park dealing with visitor management; and now he will be reexamining that research to see how their thinking and findings from the past compare to the re
USU Moab Researcher Looking Into Previous Park Visitation Research to See How It Compares to Now

USU Moab Researcher Looking Into Previous Park Visitation Research to See How It Compares to Now

In 1990-1991, USU Moab professor Wayne Freimund participated in a research project at Arches National Park dealing with visitor management; and now he will be reexamining that research to see how their thinking and findings from the past compare to the re...

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In the Western U.S. where skiing, hiking, biking, hunting and other forms of outdoor recreation are core to many people’s lives, and where local economies rely on income generated by these activities, the impacts of a changing climate are already difficul
Change of Scenery: New Research Outlines How Recreation Will Shift with Climate Change in the West

Change of Scenery: New Research Outlines How Recreation Will Shift with Climate Change in the West

In the Western U.S. where skiing, hiking, biking, hunting and other forms of outdoor recreation are core to many people’s lives, and where local economies rely on income generated by these activities, the impacts of a changing climate are already difficul...

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Sierra Nevada bighorn sheep make a tough choice every winter — to remain cold, hungry, and relatively safe from predators at high elevations, or to drop down to more temperate and more risky low-elevation ranges. New research explores the strategies they
Savvy Sheep: New Research Explores Flexible Decision-Making for Bighorn Sheep Migration

Savvy Sheep: New Research Explores Flexible Decision-Making for Bighorn Sheep Migration

Sierra Nevada bighorn sheep make a tough choice every winter — to remain cold, hungry, and relatively safe from predators at high elevations, or to drop down to more temperate and more risky low-elevation ranges. New research explores the strategies they ...

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Full Size USU Ecology doctoral student Jessica Murray, at a field site in Costa Rica's Monteverde Cloud Forest Biological Preserve, is a 2022 recipient of the Ecological Society of America’s Katherine S. McCarter Graduate Student Policy Award.
Down to Earth: USU Doctoral Student Receives Ecological Society of America Honor

Down to Earth: USU Doctoral Student Receives Ecological Society of America Honor

Full Size USU Ecology doctoral student Jessica Murray, at a field site in Costa Rica's Monteverde Cloud Forest Biological Preserve, is a 2022 recipient of the Ecological Society of America’s Katherine S. McCarter Graduate Student Policy Award.

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Researchers at Utah State University are looking at ways to improve the air quality by focusing on methane gas that cows release into the air. We've all had to pass gas and so do cows but for them, it's on a pretty regular basis.
USU studies how better diets and less gassy cows can help with climate change

USU studies how better diets and less gassy cows can help with climate change

Researchers at Utah State University are looking at ways to improve the air quality by focusing on methane gas that cows release into the air. We've all had to pass gas and so do cows but for them, it's on a pretty regular basis.

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USU's Julie Young is featured in an article on how to stay safe during a mountain lion encounter.
Mountain lion encounters are rare, but if you encounter one, here are 5 ways to stay safe

Mountain lion encounters are rare, but if you encounter one, here are 5 ways to stay safe

USU's Julie Young is featured in an article on how to stay safe during a mountain lion encounter.

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Ecology_News
Pando is formed of 47,000 genetically identical aspen stems that emerged from a single seed, likely back when the last ice sheets had receded. USU's Paul Rogers, director of the Western Aspen Alliance, describes it as ‘a forest of one tree. We can think o
Pando – the world's single largest organism – is under threat

Pando – the world's single largest organism – is under threat

Pando is formed of 47,000 genetically identical aspen stems that emerged from a single seed, likely back when the last ice sheets had receded. USU's Paul Rogers, director of the Western Aspen Alliance, describes it as ‘a forest of one tree. We can think o...

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USU becomes one of just 137 total members having the Carnegie R1 classification in the nation and was one of nine to obtain this status in 2021. This designation shows that Utah State is a national leader in research and graduate education.
USU Attains Prestigious Carnegie R1 Classification, Joins Highest Level of Research Institutions

USU Attains Prestigious Carnegie R1 Classification, Joins Highest Level of Research Institutions

USU becomes one of just 137 total members having the Carnegie R1 classification in the nation and was one of nine to obtain this status in 2021. This designation shows that Utah State is a national leader in research and graduate education.

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Although some scientists long questioned the direct effect of wolf reintroduction to aspen regrowth in Yellowstone, a recently published study by USU's Dan MacNulty and Lainie Brice shows aspen regrowth was not as robust as originally advertised.
Revisiting Yellowstone's trophic cascade: Wolves' effect on aspen regeneration exaggerated, study finds

Revisiting Yellowstone's trophic cascade: Wolves' effect on aspen regeneration exaggerated, study finds

Although some scientists long questioned the direct effect of wolf reintroduction to aspen regrowth in Yellowstone, a recently published study by USU's Dan MacNulty and Lainie Brice shows aspen regrowth was not as robust as originally advertised.

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When you think about big trees, likely what comes to mind are some of the Earth’s biggest trees, like giant sequoias or redwoods, which can grow to roughly 25 stories tall. But big trees are actually an essential part of every forest ecosystem.
USU's Jim Lutz featured on Science Friday Podcast: Big Trees, Big Benefits

USU's Jim Lutz featured on Science Friday Podcast: Big Trees, Big Benefits

When you think about big trees, likely what comes to mind are some of the Earth’s biggest trees, like giant sequoias or redwoods, which can grow to roughly 25 stories tall. But big trees are actually an essential part of every forest ecosystem.

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A new institute at Utah State University that focuses on sharing evidence-based research with state decisionmakers released its 2021 Report to the Governor on Utah's Land, Water, and Air on Dec. 14.
New USU Institute Releases Inaugural Report on Natural Resources in Utah

New USU Institute Releases Inaugural Report on Natural Resources in Utah

A new institute at Utah State University that focuses on sharing evidence-based research with state decisionmakers released its 2021 Report to the Governor on Utah's Land, Water, and Air on Dec. 14.

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Full Size The award-winning book "Yellowstone Wolves" was written by the people who prepared and performed reintroduction and spent 25 years researching and managing wolves
Book 'Yellowstone Wolves' Receives Prestigious Wildlife Society Award

Book 'Yellowstone Wolves' Receives Prestigious Wildlife Society Award

Full Size The award-winning book "Yellowstone Wolves" was written by the people who prepared and performed reintroduction and spent 25 years researching and managing wolves

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Full Size A new grant will allow researchers to determine how water markets can be used to make water management systems more resilient. The interdisciplinary team include (left to right) Matt Yost, Niel Allen, Sarah Null, David Rosenberg, and Alfonso T
Head Above Water: Major Grant Awarded for Research on Water Markets

Head Above Water: Major Grant Awarded for Research on Water Markets

Full Size A new grant will allow researchers to determine how water markets can be used to make water management systems more resilient. The interdisciplinary team include (left to right) Matt Yost, Niel Allen, Sarah Null, David Rosenberg, and Alfonso T

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Chris Luecke, dean of Utah State University’s S. J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources (QCNR), announced he will step down from his leadership post, effective July 2022. The transition marks the end of a decade of thoughtful leadership and
USU's Chris Luecke to Leave Post as Natural Resources Dean

USU's Chris Luecke to Leave Post as Natural Resources Dean

Chris Luecke, dean of Utah State University’s S. J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources (QCNR), announced he will step down from his leadership post, effective July 2022. The transition marks the end of a decade of thoughtful leadership and...

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A multi-disciplinary team of researchers at USU creating tools to better understand the global impact of climate change and other disasters as part of a national initiative.
USU Part of New Institute to Understand Climate Change, Other Disasters

USU Part of New Institute to Understand Climate Change, Other Disasters

A multi-disciplinary team of researchers at USU creating tools to better understand the global impact of climate change and other disasters as part of a national initiative.

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New research from Stefani Crabtree shows that modern subsistence diets, and the diets of ancient people, were much broader than what most people eat today. Crabtree learned how to hunt goanna lizards and other aspects of subsistence eating from Nyalanka T
Stone Age Foodies: Comparing Ancient and Modern Food Choices with Isotopes

Stone Age Foodies: Comparing Ancient and Modern Food Choices with Isotopes

New research from Stefani Crabtree shows that modern subsistence diets, and the diets of ancient people, were much broader than what most people eat today. Crabtree learned how to hunt goanna lizards and other aspects of subsistence eating from Nyalanka T...

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Most people are oblivious to the vast, interconnected network that underlies a forest floor, but it’s a system that plants literally depend on for survival — especially big trees. They are able to fend off attackers better when they are connected to this
Hidden Allies Aid Survival of the West's Largest Trees

Hidden Allies Aid Survival of the West's Largest Trees

Most people are oblivious to the vast, interconnected network that underlies a forest floor, but it’s a system that plants literally depend on for survival — especially big trees. They are able to fend off attackers better when they are connected to this ...

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Ecology_News
Professor Sarah Null of Utah State University will be working with a diverse team of experts to study how to better manage water stored for the environment, to better protect vulnerable ecosystems during a time of biodiversity loss and accelerating climat
What It Means to Store Water for the Environment

What It Means to Store Water for the Environment

Professor Sarah Null of Utah State University will be working with a diverse team of experts to study how to better manage water stored for the environment, to better protect vulnerable ecosystems during a time of biodiversity loss and accelerating climat...

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Ecology_News
Getting beaver populations to thrive in Utah's desert landscape has been a challenging task for Emma Doden, a masters student in translocated beaver ecology at Utah State University. Doden and several other researchers set out to reintroduce beavers to th
The Beavers Returning to the Desert

The Beavers Returning to the Desert

Getting beaver populations to thrive in Utah's desert landscape has been a challenging task for Emma Doden, a masters student in translocated beaver ecology at Utah State University. Doden and several other researchers set out to reintroduce beavers to th...

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Ecology_News
Recently, researchers from South Korea, Japan and the United States found that by projecting the fire weather conditions under two mildly varying warming levels.
'Best Case' Goals for Climate Warming Could Still Result in Massive Wildfire Risk

'Best Case' Goals for Climate Warming Could Still Result in Massive Wildfire Risk

Recently, researchers from South Korea, Japan and the United States found that by projecting the fire weather conditions under two mildly varying warming levels.

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How resilient mountain pine beetles (Dendroctonus ponderosae) are to changing temperatures.
Mountain Pine Beetles Show Resiliency to Warming Climates

Mountain Pine Beetles Show Resiliency to Warming Climates

How resilient mountain pine beetles (Dendroctonus ponderosae) are to changing temperatures.

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UNESCO today released the first global scientific assessment of its World Heritage marine sites’ blue carbon ecosystems, highlighting the critical environmental value of these habitats.
New research demonstrates crucial role of World Heritage marine sites in fighting climate change

New research demonstrates crucial role of World Heritage marine sites in fighting climate change

UNESCO today released the first global scientific assessment of its World Heritage marine sites’ blue carbon ecosystems, highlighting the critical environmental value of these habitats.

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Ecology_News
In addition to annoying bites and buzzing, some mosquitoes carry harmful diseases.
USU Biologist Uses Machine-Learning Approach to Track Disease-Carrying Mosquitoes

USU Biologist Uses Machine-Learning Approach to Track Disease-Carrying Mosquitoes

In addition to annoying bites and buzzing, some mosquitoes carry harmful diseases.

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Online film screening window: Friday - Sunday, March 5-7 2021 Panel Discussion via Zoom Monday, March 8, 2021 Noon MST Click for more information
Picture a Scientist

Picture a Scientist

Online film screening window: Friday - Sunday, March 5-7 2021 Panel Discussion via Zoom Monday, March 8, 2021 Noon MST Click for more information

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USU entomologists, faculty member Joe Wilson, left, and alumna Olivia Carril, search for bees in an area under development near Utah's GSENM. The longtime collaborators are featured in a new documentary premiering Sept. 24. Tony Di Zinno.
USU Entomologists Featured in Grand Staircase-Escalante Bee Documentary

USU Entomologists Featured in Grand Staircase-Escalante Bee Documentary

USU entomologists, faculty member Joe Wilson, left, and alumna Olivia Carril, search for bees in an area under development near Utah's GSENM. The longtime collaborators are featured in a new documentary premiering Sept. 24. Tony Di Zinno.

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In 1863 the U.S. Army attacked the Shoshone Tribe instigating the largest mass murder of Native Americans in US History.
Boa Ogoi: Restoring Sacred Land 150 years after the Bear River Massacre

Boa Ogoi: Restoring Sacred Land 150 years after the Bear River Massacre

In 1863 the U.S. Army attacked the Shoshone Tribe instigating the largest mass murder of Native Americans in US History.

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Although the dangers of human and wildlife close encounters are well documented, humans seem unable to resist the temptation to try to get close to, or even touch, wildlife.
Ask an Expert - Smartphones and Wildlife a Bad Combination

Ask an Expert - Smartphones and Wildlife a Bad Combination

Although the dangers of human and wildlife close encounters are well documented, humans seem unable to resist the temptation to try to get close to, or even touch, wildlife.

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Leaders across the west are grappling with how to continue to share a diminishing supply of water from the Colorado River.
Managers Turn to USU Water Experts to Understand Dynamics of a Dwindling Colorado River Supply

Managers Turn to USU Water Experts to Understand Dynamics of a Dwindling Colorado River Supply

Leaders across the west are grappling with how to continue to share a diminishing supply of water from the Colorado River.

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The beaver relocation project, a partnership between Utah State University, the U.S. Forest Service and the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, is part habitat restoration and part population growth for the species.
Nature's Engineers: Relocating Beavers for Habitat Restoration

Nature's Engineers: Relocating Beavers for Habitat Restoration

The beaver relocation project, a partnership between Utah State University, the U.S. Forest Service and the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, is part habitat restoration and part population growth for the species.

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Dr. John M. Neuhold, professor emeritus of Utah State University’s Quinney College of Natural Resources and first director of the Ecology Center, passed away on June 29, 2020, at the age of 92.
Remembering Dr. John Neuhold

Remembering Dr. John Neuhold

Dr. John M. Neuhold, professor emeritus of Utah State University’s Quinney College of Natural Resources and first director of the Ecology Center, passed away on June 29, 2020, at the age of 92.

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Research on the drying of Tonle Sap, Southeast Asia's largest lake and the center of the world's most productive fishery, conducted by USU researchers Sara Null and Sapana Lohani is being featured in National Geographic.
Cambodia's Biggest Lake is Running Dry, Taking Forests and Fish With It

Cambodia's Biggest Lake is Running Dry, Taking Forests and Fish With It

Research on the drying of Tonle Sap, Southeast Asia's largest lake and the center of the world's most productive fishery, conducted by USU researchers Sara Null and Sapana Lohani is being featured in National Geographic.

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A recent study found wind and rain are scattering tiny pieces of plastic throughout national parks and wilderness areas in the West — including one unique landscape in Idaho.
Tiny Plastic Particles are Piling Up in Idaho's Wild Places, According to This Study

Tiny Plastic Particles are Piling Up in Idaho's Wild Places, According to This Study

A recent study found wind and rain are scattering tiny pieces of plastic throughout national parks and wilderness areas in the West — including one unique landscape in Idaho.

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A new study by USU Assistant Professor, Trisha Atwood, suggests modern-day megaherbivores could suffer the same fate with unknown consequences for Earth.
Herbivores, Not Predators, Most At Risk of Extinction

Herbivores, Not Predators, Most At Risk of Extinction

A new study by USU Assistant Professor, Trisha Atwood, suggests modern-day megaherbivores could suffer the same fate with unknown consequences for Earth.

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Michelle Baker, associate dean in Utah State University’s College of Science and professor in the Department of Biology and the USU Ecology Center, will serve as the college’s interim dean, beginning January 1, 2021.
Michelle Baker to Serve as Interim Science Dean During 2021 Search

Michelle Baker to Serve as Interim Science Dean During 2021 Search

Michelle Baker, associate dean in Utah State University’s College of Science and professor in the Department of Biology and the USU Ecology Center, will serve as the college’s interim dean, beginning January 1, 2021.

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In a paper published July 23, 2020 in Science, USU Ecologist Zach Gompert and colleagues describe a supermutation in insects that can help explain large gaps in evolutionary trees.
Sticking Out: USU Genetic Ecologist Uses Genome-Mapping to Reveal 'Supermutation'

Sticking Out: USU Genetic Ecologist Uses Genome-Mapping to Reveal 'Supermutation'

In a paper published July 23, 2020 in Science, USU Ecologist Zach Gompert and colleagues describe a supermutation in insects that can help explain large gaps in evolutionary trees.

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Ecology_News
Support fellow Aggie researchers by registering for the 2020 ESA Meeting by Thursday, July 23 and participate in live or recorded presentations. Use the hashtag #ESAWatchParty2020 to advertise a talk or to post something on Facebook and Twitter.
Support Aggie Researchers Virtually at the 2020 ESA Annual Meeting

Support Aggie Researchers Virtually at the 2020 ESA Annual Meeting

Support fellow Aggie researchers by registering for the 2020 ESA Meeting by Thursday, July 23 and participate in live or recorded presentations. Use the hashtag #ESAWatchParty2020 to advertise a talk or to post something on Facebook and Twitter.

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Protected areas, like Yellowstone, are invaluable, but are they actually effective at preserving endangered species? And if not, how can future protected areas do better?
Enlisting Private Land Owners in Conservation is Essential to Saving Endangered Species

Enlisting Private Land Owners in Conservation is Essential to Saving Endangered Species

Protected areas, like Yellowstone, are invaluable, but are they actually effective at preserving endangered species? And if not, how can future protected areas do better?

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Creosote bushes produce tufts of fluffy, white fruits. Living nearby are similarly white and fluffy wasps known as thistle-down velvet ants.
True Colors: USU Biologists Explore Evolution of White Coloration of Velvet Ants

True Colors: USU Biologists Explore Evolution of White Coloration of Velvet Ants

Creosote bushes produce tufts of fluffy, white fruits. Living nearby are similarly white and fluffy wasps known as thistle-down velvet ants.

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Ecology Graduate Student, Emma Doden, is working to understand the dynamics of beavers translocated to desert rivers for restoration purposes and how they compare to the naturally-occurring resident beavers who are already established.
Beaver in Utah's Desert Rivers

Beaver in Utah's Desert Rivers

Ecology Graduate Student, Emma Doden, is working to understand the dynamics of beavers translocated to desert rivers for restoration purposes and how they compare to the naturally-occurring resident beavers who are already established.

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Extreme heat is a growing hazard to public health, causing greater mortality than other hazards like floods, tornadoes and hurricanes in the United States.
All Summer Long: Heat Waves and COVID-19

All Summer Long: Heat Waves and COVID-19

Extreme heat is a growing hazard to public health, causing greater mortality than other hazards like floods, tornadoes and hurricanes in the United States.

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Ecology_News
The Native American Summer Mentorship Program was created with the express purpose of bringing scholars together to experience hands-on research with USU faculty, one-on-one.
In the Time of COVID Undergrad Researchers Mentors Use Technology Ingenuity and Grit

In the Time of COVID Undergrad Researchers Mentors Use Technology Ingenuity and Grit

The Native American Summer Mentorship Program was created with the express purpose of bringing scholars together to experience hands-on research with USU faculty, one-on-one.

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News
“There’s no nook or cranny on the surface of the earth that won’t have microplastics,” said USU Ecologist Janice Brahney in a New York Times article highlighting her important research on plastic pollution in the air.
Where's Airborne Plastic? Everywhere, Scientists Find.

Where's Airborne Plastic? Everywhere, Scientists Find.

“There’s no nook or cranny on the surface of the earth that won’t have microplastics,” said USU Ecologist Janice Brahney in a New York Times article highlighting her important research on plastic pollution in the air.

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Spring is in full swing. Trees are leafing out, flowers are blooming, bees are buzzing, and birds are singing. But a recent study in PNAS found that those birds in your backyard may be changing right along with the climate.
Warming Climate is Changing Where Birds Breed

Warming Climate is Changing Where Birds Breed

Spring is in full swing. Trees are leafing out, flowers are blooming, bees are buzzing, and birds are singing. But a recent study in PNAS found that those birds in your backyard may be changing right along with the climate.

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Pando looks like any other apsen forest, but the approximately 47K stems that form its body share a single genome. For the past 10 years, USU ecologist Paul Rogers has studied Pando, and in 2018 he co-authored a study that found it might be dying.
Conservation insights from an enormous aspen clone: Q&A with USU ecologist Paul Rogers

Conservation insights from an enormous aspen clone: Q&A with USU ecologist Paul Rogers

Pando looks like any other apsen forest, but the approximately 47K stems that form its body share a single genome. For the past 10 years, USU ecologist Paul Rogers has studied Pando, and in 2018 he co-authored a study that found it might be dying.

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Ecology_News
Wildfires were once an important driver of ecosystem health in western U.S forests, but decades of fire suppression, natural and human-caused disturbances and environmental change have combined to create conditions that favor wildfires.
The Utah Fire Atlas Offers Land Managers a New Tool

The Utah Fire Atlas Offers Land Managers a New Tool

Wildfires were once an important driver of ecosystem health in western U.S forests, but decades of fire suppression, natural and human-caused disturbances and environmental change have combined to create conditions that favor wildfires.

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News
“Western tanagers pass through Utah’s Cache Valley every spring but sometimes they linger in large numbers before heading to their mountain destinations,” says Utah State University ornithologist Kim Sullivan.
Migrating Birds Bring Color to USU

Migrating Birds Bring Color to USU

“Western tanagers pass through Utah’s Cache Valley every spring but sometimes they linger in large numbers before heading to their mountain destinations,” says Utah State University ornithologist Kim Sullivan.

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The Navajo Nation has been hit hard by the pandemic with more than 4,400 cases and nearly 150 deaths. Among the volunteers who have joined the relief effort are USU Biology and Ecology doctoral students Elizabeth Simpson, Megan Kepas, and Hannah Wilson.
Ecology Grads Help with Navajo Nation COVID-19 Relief

Ecology Grads Help with Navajo Nation COVID-19 Relief

The Navajo Nation has been hit hard by the pandemic with more than 4,400 cases and nearly 150 deaths. Among the volunteers who have joined the relief effort are USU Biology and Ecology doctoral students Elizabeth Simpson, Megan Kepas, and Hannah Wilson.

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News
Trisha Atwood, Bonnie Waring, and Karen Beard received a significant National Science Foundation grant to study the impact of migrating, plant-eating birds on the carbon cycle.
Three Ecology Center Faculty Members Awarded $1.4 Million NSF Grant

Three Ecology Center Faculty Members Awarded $1.4 Million NSF Grant

Trisha Atwood, Bonnie Waring, and Karen Beard received a significant National Science Foundation grant to study the impact of migrating, plant-eating birds on the carbon cycle.

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Ecology_News
USU biologist Joseph Wilson displays the new children's book, 'Bees are the Best,’ he recently published with illustrator Jonny VanOrman. Geared to preschoolers through fourth graders, the book introduces youngsters to bee diversity.
Bees are the Best: USU Biologist Publishes New Children's Book

Bees are the Best: USU Biologist Publishes New Children's Book

USU biologist Joseph Wilson displays the new children's book, 'Bees are the Best,’ he recently published with illustrator Jonny VanOrman. Geared to preschoolers through fourth graders, the book introduces youngsters to bee diversity.

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Ecology_News
Two longtime members of Utah State University’s Department of Environment and Society were honored recently by the Society for Range Management (SRM) for their career achievements in rangeland science and management.
Two College of Natural Resources Professors Recognized by the Society for Range Management

Two College of Natural Resources Professors Recognized by the Society for Range Management

Two longtime members of Utah State University’s Department of Environment and Society were honored recently by the Society for Range Management (SRM) for their career achievements in rangeland science and management.

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Ecology_News
Why are there so many species of plants? Why do some plants thrive, while others don’t?
Not Falling Far from Tree: USU Ecologist Studies Seed-to-Seed Transitions

Not Falling Far from Tree: USU Ecologist Studies Seed-to-Seed Transitions

Why are there so many species of plants? Why do some plants thrive, while others don’t?

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Ecology_News
The Great Salt Lake is facing multiple threats that put ecosystems, economies and species at risk, said Wayne Wurtsbaugh, Utah State University professor during a “Canyon Conversations” lecture Saturday morning.
USU Professor Discusses Threats to the Great Salt Lake

USU Professor Discusses Threats to the Great Salt Lake

The Great Salt Lake is facing multiple threats that put ecosystems, economies and species at risk, said Wayne Wurtsbaugh, Utah State University professor during a “Canyon Conversations” lecture Saturday morning.

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Humans are a complex species. Convincing them to do something … like protect themselves from a grizzly attack might seem like a straightforward task.
Using Science to Persuade Hikers to be Bear-Safe in Yellowstone

Using Science to Persuade Hikers to be Bear-Safe in Yellowstone

Humans are a complex species. Convincing them to do something … like protect themselves from a grizzly attack might seem like a straightforward task.

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Ecology_News
Researcher Courtney Flint, a natural resources sociologist, will address how understanding the relationship between Utah's lands and personal well being.
Land-use and Personal Wellbeing is Topic for USU's Research Landscapes

Land-use and Personal Wellbeing is Topic for USU's Research Landscapes

Researcher Courtney Flint, a natural resources sociologist, will address how understanding the relationship between Utah's lands and personal well being.

Ecology_News
News
For tens of millions of people, migration is a tough reality. What causes people to migrate away from their home countries, and what happens when they do?
Understanding Migration Requires Understanding Changing Land Systems

Understanding Migration Requires Understanding Changing Land Systems

For tens of millions of people, migration is a tough reality. What causes people to migrate away from their home countries, and what happens when they do?

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Ecology_News
Wolves are charismatic, conspicuous and easy to single out as the top predator affecting populations of elk, deer and other prey animals say Utah State University researchers Michael Kohl and Dan MacNulty.
Fearing Cougars More Than Wolves, Yellowstone Elk Manage Threats From Both

Fearing Cougars More Than Wolves, Yellowstone Elk Manage Threats From Both

Wolves are charismatic, conspicuous and easy to single out as the top predator affecting populations of elk, deer and other prey animals say Utah State University researchers Michael Kohl and Dan MacNulty.

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Ecology_News
Ecology Center and Department of Watershed Sciences faculty, Sarah Null, spoke recently with the National Geographic about her research on drought and dams on the Mekong River.
Sarah Null's Research on the Mekong River Featured in the National Geographic

Sarah Null's Research on the Mekong River Featured in the National Geographic

Ecology Center and Department of Watershed Sciences faculty, Sarah Null, spoke recently with the National Geographic about her research on drought and dams on the Mekong River.

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Ecology_News
Utah State University ecologist Bonnie Waring heads one of seven projects chosen nationally by competitive peer review for a U.S. Department of Energy Terrestrial Ecological Sciences grant.
USU Ecologist Receives DOE Grant to Study Soil's Role in Carbon Cycle

USU Ecologist Receives DOE Grant to Study Soil's Role in Carbon Cycle

Utah State University ecologist Bonnie Waring heads one of seven projects chosen nationally by competitive peer review for a U.S. Department of Energy Terrestrial Ecological Sciences grant.

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Ecology_News
Utah State University researchers Jennifer Weathered and Edd Hammill report that the impacts of agricultural pesticides on assemblages of aquatic insects varied resulting in distinct ecological winners and losers within aquatic communities.
Biting Backfire: Some Mosquitoes Actually Benefit from Pesticide Application

Biting Backfire: Some Mosquitoes Actually Benefit from Pesticide Application

Utah State University researchers Jennifer Weathered and Edd Hammill report that the impacts of agricultural pesticides on assemblages of aquatic insects varied resulting in distinct ecological winners and losers within aquatic communities.

Ecology_News
News
This week UPR Science Reporter and Ecology graduate student, Ashely Rohde, took home not one but two first place awards from the Society of Professional Journalists - Utah Chapter.
Congrats to UPR Science Reporter & Ecology Graduate Student, Ashley Rohde, for Recognition by The Society of Professional Journalists

Congrats to UPR Science Reporter & Ecology Graduate Student, Ashley Rohde, for Recognition by The Society of Professional Journalists

This week UPR Science Reporter and Ecology graduate student, Ashely Rohde, took home not one but two first place awards from the Society of Professional Journalists - Utah Chapter.

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Ecology_News
American biologist E.O. Wilson supports the biophilia hypothesis – “BET” for short – suggesting humans possess an innate tendency to seek connections with nature and other forms of life.
Citizen Scientists: Join USU Ecologists in NSF-funded Biodiversity Study

Citizen Scientists: Join USU Ecologists in NSF-funded Biodiversity Study

American biologist E.O. Wilson supports the biophilia hypothesis – “BET” for short – suggesting humans possess an innate tendency to seek connections with nature and other forms of life.

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Ecology_News
Jim Lutz and graduate student Sara Germain of the Department of Wildland Resources in the S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources were featured in a BBC video on the life history of trees.
USU Researchers Featured in BBC Video on Trees in Yosemite

USU Researchers Featured in BBC Video on Trees in Yosemite

Jim Lutz and graduate student Sara Germain of the Department of Wildland Resources in the S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources were featured in a BBC video on the life history of trees.

Ecology_News
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Utah is experiencing an explosion in population and a changing economy. These conditions are transforming the way the state uses water, particularly in the case of urbanization.
Water is Focal Point at USU's Research Landscapes Talk in Salt Lake City

Water is Focal Point at USU's Research Landscapes Talk in Salt Lake City

Utah is experiencing an explosion in population and a changing economy. These conditions are transforming the way the state uses water, particularly in the case of urbanization.

Ecology_News
News
Jacqueline J. Peña, a recent Ecology master’s alumna, from the Department of Wildland Resources in the S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources, was awarded the 2018 Ecological Society of America (ESA) E. Lucy Braun award for her poster.
USU Alumna Awarded Prestigious ESA E. Lucy Braun Award

USU Alumna Awarded Prestigious ESA E. Lucy Braun Award

Jacqueline J. Peña, a recent Ecology master’s alumna, from the Department of Wildland Resources in the S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources, was awarded the 2018 Ecological Society of America (ESA) E. Lucy Braun award for her poster.

Ecology_News
News
It’s a dog-eat-dog world and, in the struggle for existence, organisms interact with each other and their environment in a myriad of ways. Along that journey, they adapt, or perish, as they’re exposed to peril at every turn.
USU Biologist Zach Gompert Receives Prestigious NSF CAREER Award

USU Biologist Zach Gompert Receives Prestigious NSF CAREER Award

It’s a dog-eat-dog world and, in the struggle for existence, organisms interact with each other and their environment in a myriad of ways. Along that journey, they adapt, or perish, as they’re exposed to peril at every turn.

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Ecology_News
Knowledge of the past is crucial for adaptation in the future, and research from an ecologist at Utah State University may help promote better understanding of winter weather anomalies by investigating evidence of historic climate and weather.
Climate History in Tree Rings Builds Understanding of Climate Future

Climate History in Tree Rings Builds Understanding of Climate Future

Knowledge of the past is crucial for adaptation in the future, and research from an ecologist at Utah State University may help promote better understanding of winter weather anomalies by investigating evidence of historic climate and weather.

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Ecology_News
For wildfire firefighters, knowing exactly how long it takes for them to reach safety is critical, and new research provides more precise information about the time to cross different terrains and different slopes.
Rachel Hager, Ecology Grad Student and UPR Science Reporter, Reports on More Precise and Accurate Travel Time for Firefighters Crossing Rough Terrain

Rachel Hager, Ecology Grad Student and UPR Science Reporter, Reports on More Precise and Accurate Travel Time for Firefighters Crossing Rough Terrain

For wildfire firefighters, knowing exactly how long it takes for them to reach safety is critical, and new research provides more precise information about the time to cross different terrains and different slopes.

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Ecology_News
Up in the mountains near Preston, Idaho and the Oneida Narrows of the Bear River, Professor Joe Wheaton of Utah State University and his students are working to restore a small stream called Station Creek.
Niall Clancy, Ecology Grad Student and UPR Science Reporter, Reports on USU Researchers Using Beavers As Tools In Stream Restoration

Niall Clancy, Ecology Grad Student and UPR Science Reporter, Reports on USU Researchers Using Beavers As Tools In Stream Restoration

Up in the mountains near Preston, Idaho and the Oneida Narrows of the Bear River, Professor Joe Wheaton of Utah State University and his students are working to restore a small stream called Station Creek.

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Ecology_News
Researchers at the University of Utah recently published a paper describing new technology that will make the development of biofuels from plants more economically feasible.
UPR Science Reporter, Ashley Rohde Reports on New Technique To Extract Fuel From Algae

UPR Science Reporter, Ashley Rohde Reports on New Technique To Extract Fuel From Algae

Researchers at the University of Utah recently published a paper describing new technology that will make the development of biofuels from plants more economically feasible.

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Ecology_News
Utah State University’s Office of Research announced Charles “Chuck” Hawkins as the 2019 recipient of the D. Wynne Thorne Career Research Award.
Charles Hawkins Awarded USU's Most Prestigious Research Accolade

Charles Hawkins Awarded USU's Most Prestigious Research Accolade

Utah State University’s Office of Research announced Charles “Chuck” Hawkins as the 2019 recipient of the D. Wynne Thorne Career Research Award.

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Ecology_News
A controlled detonation Sunday night in Juab County lit up the sky with a massive fireball.
UPR Science Reporter, Rachel Hager, Reports on Massive Fireball And Environmental Clean-Up From Controlled Explosion Of Derailed Railcars

UPR Science Reporter, Rachel Hager, Reports on Massive Fireball And Environmental Clean-Up From Controlled Explosion Of Derailed Railcars

A controlled detonation Sunday night in Juab County lit up the sky with a massive fireball.

Ecology_News
News
The warm temperatures of spring are heading our way and the intense heat of the summer is just around the corner. Now, there is new research investigating how we perceive extreme heat and how it can affect us.
UPR Science Reporter, Rachel Hager, Reports on How Socio-Economic Differences In Extreme Heat Risk Perception May Impact Responses

UPR Science Reporter, Rachel Hager, Reports on How Socio-Economic Differences In Extreme Heat Risk Perception May Impact Responses

The warm temperatures of spring are heading our way and the intense heat of the summer is just around the corner. Now, there is new research investigating how we perceive extreme heat and how it can affect us.

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Ecology_News
Listen as UPR's Niall Clancy visits a unique stream restoration project in southern Idaho. Features Professor Joe Wheaton from the Utah State University Restoration Consortium.
Science Utah Podcast Episode 5: Stream Restoration with Beavers

Science Utah Podcast Episode 5: Stream Restoration with Beavers

Listen as UPR's Niall Clancy visits a unique stream restoration project in southern Idaho. Features Professor Joe Wheaton from the Utah State University Restoration Consortium.

Ecology_News
News
Elk roam the winter range that straddles the northern boundary of Yellowstone National Park with little regard for wolves.
Yellowstone Elk Don't Budge for Wolves say Scientists

Yellowstone Elk Don't Budge for Wolves say Scientists

Elk roam the winter range that straddles the northern boundary of Yellowstone National Park with little regard for wolves.

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Ecology_News
Born in Sweden in 1814, Anders Ångström was a physicist, solar astronomer and a pioneer in the field of spectroscopy. He was among the first scientists to identify hydrogen in the Sun’s atmosphere and to examine the spectrum of the Aurora Borealis.
USU's Science Unwrapped Explores the Ångström Scale Friday, March 22

USU's Science Unwrapped Explores the Ångström Scale Friday, March 22

Born in Sweden in 1814, Anders Ångström was a physicist, solar astronomer and a pioneer in the field of spectroscopy. He was among the first scientists to identify hydrogen in the Sun’s atmosphere and to examine the spectrum of the Aurora Borealis.

Ecology_News
News
When millions of geese descend from the warm winds carrying them north along the Pacific coast to Alaska, they are arriving a bit earlier every year. Shifts in global climate patterns are changing the way migratory birds move around the globe each spring.
The Early Bird Gets the Protein Despite a Changing Climate

The Early Bird Gets the Protein Despite a Changing Climate

When millions of geese descend from the warm winds carrying them north along the Pacific coast to Alaska, they are arriving a bit earlier every year. Shifts in global climate patterns are changing the way migratory birds move around the globe each spring....

Ecology_News
News
Logan Mayor Holly Daines held a second public hearing at Logan City Hall last night to discuss allowing dogs into Logan City parks for a 12-month trial period.
Science Utah Podcast Episode 4: Dog Poop

Science Utah Podcast Episode 4: Dog Poop

Logan Mayor Holly Daines held a second public hearing at Logan City Hall last night to discuss allowing dogs into Logan City parks for a 12-month trial period.

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Ecology_News
The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is one of the most controversial pieces of legislation in the American West. This week, UPR's Niall Clancy explores the perceptions and realities of the ESA with the help of the University of Utah's Dr. Bob Keiter.
Science Utah Podcast Episode 3: The Endangered Species Act

Science Utah Podcast Episode 3: The Endangered Species Act

The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is one of the most controversial pieces of legislation in the American West. This week, UPR's Niall Clancy explores the perceptions and realities of the ESA with the help of the University of Utah's Dr. Bob Keiter.

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Ecology_News
Microevolution, or traits varying due to natural selection, is pretty settled in evolutionary science. But macroevolution – the evolution of new species – hasn’t been observed.
UPR Science Reporter, Leslie Forero, Reports on Study That Suggests Microevolution and Macroevolutionary Patterns Seen In Pigeon Lice

UPR Science Reporter, Leslie Forero, Reports on Study That Suggests Microevolution and Macroevolutionary Patterns Seen In Pigeon Lice

Microevolution, or traits varying due to natural selection, is pretty settled in evolutionary science. But macroevolution – the evolution of new species – hasn’t been observed.

Ecology_News
News
Heat waves are more dangerous than tornadoes, statistically. They kill more people than sharks, and put more human lives at risk than blizzards, floods or lightning storms.
Focusing the Heat: Extreme Weather Risk Perception in the United States

Focusing the Heat: Extreme Weather Risk Perception in the United States

Heat waves are more dangerous than tornadoes, statistically. They kill more people than sharks, and put more human lives at risk than blizzards, floods or lightning storms.

Ecology_News
News
While most individuals are unaware of how food gets from farm to table, Dr. Kynda Curtis, a professor and extension specialist in applied economics at Utah State University, is all too familiar with the process.
Extension Specialist Awarded For Research On Behalf Of Small Farmers

Extension Specialist Awarded For Research On Behalf Of Small Farmers

While most individuals are unaware of how food gets from farm to table, Dr. Kynda Curtis, a professor and extension specialist in applied economics at Utah State University, is all too familiar with the process.

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Ecology_News
Bear Lake is also home to several species of fish found nowhere else in the world.
Drought Linked to Declines of Unique Bear Lake Fish

Drought Linked to Declines of Unique Bear Lake Fish

Bear Lake is also home to several species of fish found nowhere else in the world.

Ecology_News
News
New research suggests that social and economic impacts of wildfire are becoming more complex. Liana Prudencio is a PhD student in Watershed Sciences and the Climate Adaption Science program at Utah State University.
Complex Economic And Socio-Political Challenges Of Wildfires In The Intermountain West

Complex Economic And Socio-Political Challenges Of Wildfires In The Intermountain West

New research suggests that social and economic impacts of wildfire are becoming more complex. Liana Prudencio is a PhD student in Watershed Sciences and the Climate Adaption Science program at Utah State University.

Ecology_News
News
This episode of Science Utah features stories from UPR's Riana Gayle and Niall Clancy. Tune in to hear about northern Utah's Bear Lake, its fishes, and what's being done to conserve them.
Science Utah Podcast Episode 2: Fishes of Bear Lake

Science Utah Podcast Episode 2: Fishes of Bear Lake

This episode of Science Utah features stories from UPR's Riana Gayle and Niall Clancy. Tune in to hear about northern Utah's Bear Lake, its fishes, and what's being done to conserve them.

Ecology_News
News
USU AggieAir At Forefront Of DroneDrones may be the future of convenience and delivery, but there are still many challenges when it comes to using them in urban environments.
USU AggieAir At Forefront Of Drone Technology

USU AggieAir At Forefront Of Drone Technology

USU AggieAir At Forefront Of DroneDrones may be the future of convenience and delivery, but there are still many challenges when it comes to using them in urban environments.

Ecology_News
News
In six well-regarded hydrology and water resources journals published in 2017, the estimated percentage of studies whose results could be fully reproduced was only between 0.06 and 6.8 percent.
Aiming for Gold: Improving Reproducibility in Hydrology Studies

Aiming for Gold: Improving Reproducibility in Hydrology Studies

In six well-regarded hydrology and water resources journals published in 2017, the estimated percentage of studies whose results could be fully reproduced was only between 0.06 and 6.8 percent.

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Ecology_News
Coal is big in Utah. It's our state rock and according to the US Energy Information Administration, it represents one-third of our state's total energy production.
Burning Fossil Fuels Reduces Diversity In Wet Regions, Study Suggests

Burning Fossil Fuels Reduces Diversity In Wet Regions, Study Suggests

Coal is big in Utah. It's our state rock and according to the US Energy Information Administration, it represents one-third of our state's total energy production.

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Ecology_News
For Science Utah's inaugural podcast episode, reporters Ashley Rhode and Rachel Hager join producer Niall Clancy for a discussion about Utah's state insect.
Science Utah Podcast Episode 1: Bee Ranchers

Science Utah Podcast Episode 1: Bee Ranchers

For Science Utah's inaugural podcast episode, reporters Ashley Rhode and Rachel Hager join producer Niall Clancy for a discussion about Utah's state insect.

Ecology_News
News
Join UPR for a new podcast - Science Utah! Each episode features stories and commentary by UPR's science reporters on subjects like bees, air quality, or even dog poop.
Science Utah: UPR Announces New Podcast

Science Utah: UPR Announces New Podcast

Join UPR for a new podcast - Science Utah! Each episode features stories and commentary by UPR's science reporters on subjects like bees, air quality, or even dog poop.

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Ecology_News
The second USU Research Landscapes event will be held on June 18, and will feature research about Utah's water usage by Department of Biology Professor Michelle Baker.
USU Launches New Research Series on Land, Water and Air

USU Launches New Research Series on Land, Water and Air

The second USU Research Landscapes event will be held on June 18, and will feature research about Utah's water usage by Department of Biology Professor Michelle Baker.

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Ecology_News
Scientists get a bad rap for being poor communicators, says Utah State University physics alum and faculty member Rob Davies (Physics, MS’96, PhD ’99).
Created at USU, 'The Crossroads Project' Unlocks People's Thinking

Created at USU, 'The Crossroads Project' Unlocks People's Thinking

Scientists get a bad rap for being poor communicators, says Utah State University physics alum and faculty member Rob Davies (Physics, MS’96, PhD ’99).

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Ecology_News
A new scientific book, commissioned by the British Ecological Society and published by Cambridge University Press, provides the first comprehensive and rigorous review of the rewilding concept.
Cheetahs around Cheyenne? New Book Reviews the Rewilding Concept in Ecology

Cheetahs around Cheyenne? New Book Reviews the Rewilding Concept in Ecology

A new scientific book, commissioned by the British Ecological Society and published by Cambridge University Press, provides the first comprehensive and rigorous review of the rewilding concept.

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Ecology_News
Before humans knew they existed, tiny microbes were hard at work in helpful and sometimes not-so-helpful ways. “Microscopic organisms have influenced major historical events,” says Utah State University biologist Bonnie Waring.
Can Microbes Change History?' Asks Science Unwrapped Friday, Jan. 25

Can Microbes Change History?' Asks Science Unwrapped Friday, Jan. 25

Before humans knew they existed, tiny microbes were hard at work in helpful and sometimes not-so-helpful ways. “Microscopic organisms have influenced major historical events,” says Utah State University biologist Bonnie Waring.

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Ecology_News
Declines in native bee populations are widely reported, but can existing data really analyze these trends?
USU Bee Surveys in Newest National Park Could Aid Studies Elsewhere

USU Bee Surveys in Newest National Park Could Aid Studies Elsewhere

Declines in native bee populations are widely reported, but can existing data really analyze these trends?

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Ecology_News
You would think that scientists would know how many species occur in an area, especially one as well-populated as Cache County.
Two New Wildflower Species Discovered in Logan Canyon

Two New Wildflower Species Discovered in Logan Canyon

You would think that scientists would know how many species occur in an area, especially one as well-populated as Cache County.

Ecology_News
News
What does your favorite wild animal, a wildebeest, a wolf, and a sea otter have in common? Among many similarities, these and other wild animals affect the carbon cycle.
Animals, the Keepers of Natural Climate Change Solutions?

Animals, the Keepers of Natural Climate Change Solutions?

What does your favorite wild animal, a wildebeest, a wolf, and a sea otter have in common? Among many similarities, these and other wild animals affect the carbon cycle.

Ecology_News
News
How do you tackle a wicked problem like climate change? The truth is there are no easy answers.
USU Grad Students Gain Cross-Disciplinary Skills to Tackle Climate Change

USU Grad Students Gain Cross-Disciplinary Skills to Tackle Climate Change

How do you tackle a wicked problem like climate change? The truth is there are no easy answers.

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Ecology_News
A weave of Utah State University international relationships has led to worldwide forest ecology research, the establishment of a consortium, and hopefully a better understanding of one of the world’s oldest and largest single organisms.
Global Research Exchanges Benefit Utah Aspen

Global Research Exchanges Benefit Utah Aspen

A weave of Utah State University international relationships has led to worldwide forest ecology research, the establishment of a consortium, and hopefully a better understanding of one of the world’s oldest and largest single organisms.

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Ecology_News
Roaming with bison in Custer, South Dakota or gawking at drop-dead vistas from Dead Horse Point, Utah … state parks in the United States offer spectacular scenery and seemingly endless acres of recreation opportunities.
A Finger on the Pulse of U.S. State Parks

A Finger on the Pulse of U.S. State Parks

Roaming with bison in Custer, South Dakota or gawking at drop-dead vistas from Dead Horse Point, Utah … state parks in the United States offer spectacular scenery and seemingly endless acres of recreation opportunities.

Ecology_News
News
The New York Times published a summary of research by Peter Howe, assistant professor in the Environment and Society Department at Utah State University, and his colleagues in the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.
Climate Change and Renewable Energy: Where we agree and where we don't

Climate Change and Renewable Energy: Where we agree and where we don't

The New York Times published a summary of research by Peter Howe, assistant professor in the Environment and Society Department at Utah State University, and his colleagues in the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.

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Ecology_News
Utah State University ecologists celebrated past and current achievements during the USU Ecology Center’s 50th Anniversary Luncheon and Symposium held Oct. 24, 2018.
USU Ecology Center Celebrates 50th Anniversary with Luncheon Symposium

USU Ecology Center Celebrates 50th Anniversary with Luncheon Symposium

Utah State University ecologists celebrated past and current achievements during the USU Ecology Center’s 50th Anniversary Luncheon and Symposium held Oct. 24, 2018.

Ecology_News
News
Utah State University researchers Paul Rogers and Darren McAvoy have conducted the first complete assessment of the Pando aspen clone and the results show continuing deterioration of this 'forest of one tree.'
First comprehensive assessment of Pando reveals critical threats

First comprehensive assessment of Pando reveals critical threats

Utah State University researchers Paul Rogers and Darren McAvoy have conducted the first complete assessment of the Pando aspen clone and the results show continuing deterioration of this 'forest of one tree.'

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Ecology_News
Joanna Endter-Wada and Karin Kettenring contributed a guest editorial to the October edition of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment on the value of wetlands to mitigate weather catastrophes.
Sustaining Wetlands to Mitigate Disasters and Protect People

Sustaining Wetlands to Mitigate Disasters and Protect People

Joanna Endter-Wada and Karin Kettenring contributed a guest editorial to the October edition of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment on the value of wetlands to mitigate weather catastrophes.

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Ecology_News
Scientists get a bad rap for being poor communicators, says USU Physics alum and faculty member Rob Davies (Physics, MS’96, PhD ’99).
The Crossroads Project: Unlocking People’s Thinking

The Crossroads Project: Unlocking People’s Thinking

Scientists get a bad rap for being poor communicators, says USU Physics alum and faculty member Rob Davies (Physics, MS’96, PhD ’99).

Ecology_News
News
he cause-effect sequence or “feedback” between plants and their soil microbial communities plays an important role in structuring plant communities. To predict this synergistic coexistence, researchers conduct short-term, pairwise experiments — measuring
Out of the Loop: USU Ecologist Says Short-Term Plant-Soil Feedback Experiments May Fall Short

Out of the Loop: USU Ecologist Says Short-Term Plant-Soil Feedback Experiments May Fall Short

he cause-effect sequence or “feedback” between plants and their soil microbial communities plays an important role in structuring plant communities. To predict this synergistic coexistence, researchers conduct short-term, pairwise experiments — measuring ...