News
- Jane Bock and David Norris use plant evidence to solve crimes and document the locations and movements of suspects and victims.
- Noah Fierer, Associate Professor in EBIO was recently featured on NPR's Science Friday. In this segement, Noah talks about microbes in soil and their lifecycle during the spring time. Listen on NPR!
- Sheela Turbek - Graduate student in Dr. Safran's lab has been awarded one of the NSF's prestigious Graduate Research Fellowships! NSF fellowships are generally awarded early in graduate careers, recipients of the award compete against
- Students in the Baker RAP program survey bumblebee populations around Boulder. Students have found that the 'white-rumped bumblebee' thought to be going extinct has been making a comeback in the Colorado Front Range system. Read the full story.[
- Sam Simkin, William Bowman and Katherine Suding published research this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Their findings examined nitrogen pollution and it's affect on plant diversity across the United States.
- Congratulations to Lauren Shoemaker, David Zonana, Amanda Hund, Teal Potter, and Taylor Chock for their successful Beverly Sears grants! This is a high number of grants for a single department, and reflects well on EBIO. Beverly
- C. euknemos is one of many frog species threatened by chytrid fungus. (Photo: Doug Woodhams)Former postdoc, Doug Woodhams, Molly Bletz, Assistant Professor, Valerie McKenzie and recent PhD graduate Jordan Kueneman recently published a paper in
- Nancy Emery, Assistant professor in EBIO has just been awarded her NSF career grant. Congratulations Nancy!Below is the synopsis of the grant award:OVERVIEWDispersal influences species distribution patterns by determining the range of
- Congrats to Noah Fierer for making Thompson Reuters list of the most highly cited researchers of papers published between 2003 and 2013.
- Jeff Mitton, professor in EBIO finds an unwelcomed guest in his home - a western conifer seed bug. Leptoglossus occidentalis, the seed bug's scientific name, is known to spend winters inside the homes of boulder residents, read more