Tag: Forest and Wildlife Ecology
- Posted on October 27, 2011
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Posted on July 29, 2011
David Drake: bats and white nose syndrome
/RSS Feed[audio:https://news.cals.wisc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/david_drake_bats_wisconsin.mp3|titles=David Drake talks about bats and white nose syndrome] David Drake, Associate Professor Department of Forest & Wildlife Ecology UW College of Agricultural and Life […]
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Posted on June 2, 2011
Livestock risks from Wisconsin wolves localized, predictable
It’s an issue that crops up wherever humans and big predators — wolves, bears, lions — coexist. “It’s just hard to live alongside large carnivores. […]
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Posted on April 5, 2011
Forest Products Lab to host Earth Day Open House – April 22
The general public is invited to an Earth Day Open House on Friday, Apr. 22 at the USDA Forest Products Laboratory (FPL), located at One […]
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Posted on February 28, 2011
A bug in the system
Climate change is fueling the biggest outbreak ever of tree-killing bark beetles. The insects are decimating conifer forests from Alaska to Arizona—and raising concerns that they could reach the Upper Midwest.
- Posted on February 7, 2011
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Posted on February 2, 2011
Following the trail of stress in bears
THIS PAST SEPTEMBER, Karl Malcolm scoured the forested mountaintops of Southwestern China for evidence of Asiatic black bears, hiking with a team of Chinese naturalists […]
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Posted on January 28, 2011
Stan Temple: A life saving threatened species
It is an icy winter Monday, and Stan Temple, for the sake of a shortened semester, must cram two lectures into one for the 300 […]
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Posted on January 6, 2011
New sustainability project to focus on links between water system and human, landscape factors
An interdisciplinary team of scientists and engineers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is turning a comprehensive lens on Madison’s water in all its forms — […]
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Posted on October 18, 2010
Aldo Leopold, A Sand County Almanac and Climate Change
Stanley Temple explains how climate change is disrupting the integrity of ecological communities.