Tag: "Center for Environmental Management of Military Lands"
Outstanding WCNR Graduate: Nate Kettle, Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology
A Q&A with WCNR outstanding graduate Nate Kettle, Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology department.
Small team, big impact: CEMML joins wildland firefighting in Alaska
In June of 2019, lightning ignited a wildfire on the Kenai Peninsula south of Anchorage, Alaska, threatening homes and infrastructure. The Swan Lake fire would go on to burn nearly 170,000 acres of Alaskan wilderness. When the initial call for support went out, a small group of wildland firefighters from Colorado State University’s Center for Environmental Management of Military Lands joined the response. Based at nearby Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, the CEMML team was just getting its footing as the base’s new Wildland Support Module.
CSU center works to recover remains of American WWII pilot in France
The effort is a follow up to an archeological survey conducted in 2019, which found pieces of wreckage consistent with that of a B-17 aircraft.
Warner College appoints Reymundo Chapa executive director of Center for Environmental Management Military Lands
Reymundo “Tony” Chapa, the newly appointed director of the Center for Environmental Management of Military Lands at Colorado State University, has an extensive career filled with military, academic and project management experience.
Climate change is stripping the magnificent cloud forests of their clouds
Research from the U.S. Forest Service and CSU's Center for Environmental Management of Military Lands illustrates climate change's potential impacts on cloud forests.
New funding available for climate adaptation research at Colorado State University
CSU has joined the Southwest Climate Adaptation Science Center, which is based at the University of Arizona.
Staff for U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, CSU experts discuss adaptation practices for severe weather
Part of the Natural Resources Consortium annual meeting, the roundtable discussion was focused on how landowners are adapting to increased risks of drought, floods and other changing weather patterns.
Ram greetings to some 'real McCoys'
How do you recognize CSU employees who are located far from the everyday CSU life, separated by several states and hundreds of miles from the Fort Collins campus?