Human noise pollution is disrupting parks and wild places
A recent study found human-caused noise in protected areas doubled sound energy in many U.S. protected areas, and that noise was encroaching into the furthest reaches of remote areas.
A recent study found human-caused noise in protected areas doubled sound energy in many U.S. protected areas, and that noise was encroaching into the furthest reaches of remote areas.
More than half a century of groundwater pumping in the Great Plains has led to long segments of rivers drying up and the collapse of large-stream fishes.
A research team led by CSU successfully measured habitat fragmentation for over 4,000 species of land-dwelling mammals.
Brian Gerber has studied Javan rhinos, Madagascar carnivores and Sandhill cranes.
It is very hard to count small populations and characterize their distribution accurately. Nonetheless, scientists and the Indonesian government are forming a plan to rescue the imperiled Javan rhino.
A size 60 in jeans, Smokey Bear stacks up as one of the most recognized figures in the United States. And of course, it only makes sense that Smokey attends Warner College.
The Warner College of Natural Resources teaches a class called “Wildlife Data Collection and Analysis” that actually allows students to put collars on CSU squirrels to collect data.
A CSU-led research team found that noise pollution was twice as high as background sound levels in a majority of U.S. protected areas.
Katie Johnson and Kiloaulani Ka’awa-Gonzales have been named 2017 Udall Scholars.
Using a new approach, CSU researchers discovered that the Glacier Bay sea otter population grew more than 21 percent per year between 1993 and 2012.