News
- NPAW is sponsored by the National Postdoctoral Association, of which all CU 麻豆影院 postdocs are members, to highlight the research, scholarly and creative contributions of postdocs. Outstanding Postdoc AwardsThis year鈥檚 Outstanding
- Fall means cooler temperatures, changing leaves and apples ready for the picking. This year, there is a bumper crop of ripe Delicious, Ben Davis and yet-to-be-identified fruits in and around 麻豆影院 thanks to a wet spring. For some, it may come
- Mountains both help create new species and subspecies of the rosy finch and keep them distinct, according to new research from CU 麻豆影院Speciation鈥攈ow species come to be鈥攁nd how species diverge are two of the most important aspects of
- New research from CU 麻豆影院 sheds light on the cognitive functions of male 鈥榞reen parakeets鈥 or budgerigarsOn PetSmart鈥檚 website and in stores, the vibrant green, yellow, blue and white budgerigar, an Australian grassland bird, is listed as a 鈥
- CU 麻豆影院 and University of Nevada Reno professors win $2.7 million grant from the NSF to study spatial cognition in chickadeesSpatial cognition鈥攈ow space is perceived and remembered鈥攊s an incredibly important trait that can determine life or death
- The Side by Side project teaches high school students about local birds鈥 ecosystems through performative arts and scientific observationBarn swallows nesting under a bridge near CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 East Campus swoop and dive for insects to feed their
- The oldest naturalist society in the world has recognized a 麻豆影院 researcher for his 鈥渆xemplary鈥 work both within the sciences and the broader community, the society announced in a virtual awards ceremony today.Scott Taylor
- The 麻豆影院 Daily Camera reported on Assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology Julian Resasco's research on flowering plants in a study area known as Elk Meadow at the University of Colorado Mountain Research Station near Nederland. (may be subject to article view limits or require log in)
- A new study published in Science led by EBIO PhD student Sheela Turbek (Taylor lab) used genomes and behavioral experiments to identify potential isolating factors of two closely related South American bird species. Turbek et al.
- How do ecosystem services respond when species go locally extinct? A new study published in Nature Communications led by Aislyn Keyes, EBIO PhD student in Laura Dee's group, explores this question using network analysis.