Janice Moore recognized for pioneering parasitology, animal behavior work
Janice Moore, professor of biology in the College of Natural Sciences, has received the Animal Behavior Society's 2016 Exemplar Award.
Janice Moore, professor of biology in the College of Natural Sciences, has received the Animal Behavior Society's 2016 Exemplar Award.
The annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, taking place Feb. 11-15 in Washington, D.C., will include CSU researchers sharing the latest from their laboratories, and exciting up-and-coming trends in their fields.
Greg Florant doesn’t mind being the groundhog guy – in fact, he rather likes it. “My big day is coming up,” he jokes – that is, Feb. 2nd, when Punxsatawney Phil will be forcibly pulled from his hidey-hole to predict an early spring or prolonged winter.
Bat body type, and the environmental conditions bats use in their hibernation sites, may explain species differences in bat mortality from a common fungal infection.
Sporadic outbreaks of plague among black-tailed prairie dogs could lend insight into the spread of infectious zoonotic disease, say CSU biologists.
In honor of their daughter and the mentorship and education she received at CSU, the Richter family has established a planned gift to fund future undergraduate biology fellowships.
CSU experts will discuss the latest science behind the melting of ice at the Arctic and Antarctic polar regions Wednesday, Dec. 9, at Avogadro’s Number.
Colorado State University’s Diana Wall and coauthors make the case to integrate soil biodiversity research into human health studies in a paper published online in Nature November 23.
A planned natural gas pipeline upgrade by New Jersey's largest utility provider is based in CSU science on methane leakage in pipelines across the U.S.