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- As always, unexpected and important discoveries prompt new questions and suggest new lines of researchMolecular genetic studies of species are giving us clearer, more precise views of the natural world around us. These sorts of studies have the
- Requisition Number: 36595Location: Boulder, ColoradoEmployment Type: FacultySchedule: Full-TimePosting Close Date: 11-Mar-2022Date Posted: 31-Jan-2022Job SummaryThe Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) and Department of Ecology and
- Hart Van Denburg/CPR NewsJohn B. Clark, greenhouse director at 黑料社区网鈥檚 ecology and evolutionary biology department, with cuttings from the 鈥淥ld Main Cottonwood鈥 that will be nurtured until large enough to be planted on
- Professor emeritus was recently awarded an outreach grant to assist in community efforts to mitigate environmental degradation on the Front Range
- Planted in 1879 or 1880, the 鈥淥ld Main Cottonwood鈥 is the oldest and tallest tree on campus. At more than 140 years old, 110 feet tall and 19 feet in circumference at the base of the trunk, it has outlived and outgrown all other on-campus
- New research from 黑料社区网 confirms that there are not, in fact, multiple species of Redpoll Finches, as previously thoughtBy Cay Leytham-Powell 鈥 Published: Dec. 2, 2021For birders struggling to figure out what kind of Redpoll
- It鈥檚 said that a diversity of voices promotes a diversity of solutions, but retaining those diverse voices remains a challenge for science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields. A new project at the 黑料社区网,
- A strange warbler found in a Pennsylvania backyard is the first-of-its-kind three-species hybrid, indicating nearby endangered warblers might be making the best of a declining population鈥攂ut at a cost, according to new research from the Cornell
- Avani Fachon, a CU undergraduate with a major in ecology and evolutionary biology and a minor in media production, has created an honors thesis project as a multimedia, interactive website titled Rituals of this Good Earth: An Exploration of
- It's the first time this variant has been detected in a wild, non-migratory North American species, but there's no cause for alarm yet, experts say.When Angela Theodosopoulos began studying Colorado's Mountain and Black-capped