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Balancing the economic wins, losses from the reintroduction of wolves

In 2020, Colorado voters narrowly approved the reintroduction of gray wolves, which will happen later this year. New research from Colorado State University’s Regional Economic Development Institute estimates that the benefits to those who voted “yes” will.

Balancing the economic wins, losses from the reintroduction of wolves

Balancing the economic wins, losses from the reintroduction of wolves
colostate.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from colostate.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

CSU One Health Institute funds pilot projects around Climate Change and One Health theme

CSU One Health Institute funds pilot projects around Climate Change and One Health theme
colostate.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from colostate.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Fungal biologists fighting peach tree-killing pathogen

by Anne Manning Many a Coloradan looks forward to that first, juicy bite of a Palisade peach every summer. Demand for the famous Western Slope fruit never runs dry, but the state’s $40 million peach industry is under increasing threat from an insidious pathogen that destroys peach and other fruit-bearing trees. Researchers in Colorado State University’s College of Agricultural Sciences aim to turn the tide against the tree-killing fungal pathogen Cytospora, which for decades has wreaked havoc among peach orchards across the Western Slope, cutting the lifespans of trees in half and costing farmers millions of dollars each year.

Fungal biologists fighting peach tree-killing pathogen

Fungal biologists fighting peach tree-killing pathogen 13 May, 2021 Many a Coloradan looks forward to that first, juicy bite of a Palisade peach every summer. Demand for the famous Western Slope fruit never runs dry, but the state’s $40 million peach industry is under increasing threat from an insidious pathogen that destroys peach and other fruit-bearing trees. Researchers in Colorado State University’s College of Agricultural Sciences aim to turn the tide against the tree-killing fungal pathogen Cytospora, which for decades has wreaked havoc among peach orchards across the Western Slope, cutting the lifespans of trees in half and costing farmers millions of dollars each year.

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