Two UW Researchers Receive SERDP Grant to Study Impacts on Hawaii s Ecosystem uwyo.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uwyo.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NAU professor Jeff Foster was recently awarded a grant by the DoD for a new study, “Demonstration of Metabarcoding for Monitoring Bird Species Habitat Quality
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Volunteer Hanna Braaksma and biologist Dayna Schneider monitor a wild pig within a fence. Pigs are trapped via remote cell-phone powered trap cameras. University of Illinois employees help Army civilians monitor traps.
Photo by Scott Summers, DPW Natural and Cultural Resources
Photo by Gil Eckrich DPW Natural and Cultural Resources volunteer
Photo by Gil Eckrich DPW Natural and Cultural Resources volunteer
Photo by Scott Summers, DPW Natural and Cultural Resources
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Researchers Find Nonnative Species in Oahu Play Greater Role in Seed Dispersal Networks
Corey Tarwater (right), an assistant professor in the UW Department of Zoology and Physiology, and Becky Wilcox, a UW Ph.D. student at the time of the research from Napa, Calif., set up automated radio telemetry units to track birds in Oahu, Hawaii. Tarwater and members of her research team headed research on how nonnative species play a greater role in seed dispersal networks there than native species. Their paper was published in PNAS Jan. 11. (Patrick Kelley Photo)
University of Wyoming researchers headed a study that shows nonnative birds in Oahu, Hawaii, have taken over the role of seed dispersal networks on the island, with most of the seeds coming from nonnative plants.
January 11, 2021
Corey Tarwater (right), an assistant professor in the UW Department of Zoology and Physiology, and Becky Wilcox, a UW Ph.D. student at the time of the research from Napa, Calif., set up automated radio telemetry units to track birds in Oahu, Hawaii. Tarwater and members of her research team headed research on how nonnative species play a greater role in seed dispersal networks there than native species. Their paper was published in PNAS Jan. 11. (Patrick Kelley Photo)
University of Wyoming researchers headed a study that shows nonnative birds in Oahu, Hawaii, have taken over the role of seed dispersal networks on the island, with most of the seeds coming from nonnative plants.