CSU students named NSF Graduate Research Fellows
Three Colorado State University students were recently awarded one of the country’s top STEM fellowships from the National Science Foundation.
Three Colorado State University students were recently awarded one of the country’s top STEM fellowships from the National Science Foundation.
A team of Colorado State University researchers is pioneering the use of drones, or unmanned aerial vehicles, and data modeling to create significant efficiency in evaluating post-fire impacts and give accurate predictions of post-fire tree health, enabling land managers’ decision making for post-fire recovery.
Courtney Schultz, an associate professor of forest and natural resource policy, is traveling to Washington, D.C., to speak with the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry’s Subcommittee on Conservation, Climate, Forestry, and Natural Resources to discuss Colorado State University’s extensive work related to climate change.
The award recognizes a 30-plus-year career integrating anthropology and conservation at CSU.
University operating hours will be 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily throughout the Summer 2022 term that ends on Aug. 5.
While wild horses on the nation’s public lands often elicit a romantic image of the West, these quickly growing herds have long faced problems associated with overpopulation. But results of a recent study offer a promising tool to help address those challenges.
Nearly nine in 10 Americans are expecting to travel this summer. Eight in ten plan to travel in their personal vehicles and 46 percent plan to fly. With tourism being responsible for roughly eight percent of the world’s carbon emissions, tourists traveling this summer can rely on some tips to travel more sustainably.
"Now, more than ever, it is imperative that we continue to live up to our own Principles of Community. We must embrace one another and vow to work tirelessly to ensure that we have a safe and respectful campus that values inclusiveness and encourages different voices to be heard."
After 20 years at Colorado State University, Mary Stromberger has accepted a position as vice provost and dean for graduate education at Ohio State University.