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China issues new guidelines to reduce logging
China's forest cover has seen notable progress over the past several decades. A paper written by University of Washington researchers last year is referenced.
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Hands-on Course in Agroecology
Students learned about agroecology from the ground up—literally—as they worked with farmers in an unusual and isolated high-altitude farming community in the Upper Rio Grande. -
Conservation Goes to the Dogs
When Frehley, a young border collie, was brought to a Seattle animal shelter, he was deemed unadoptable. Too much energy. Too single-minded. Too much to handle.
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Condos for Penguins?
Think of it as Habitat for Penguinity. Working with Parque Nacional Galápagos, Dee Boersma is behind the effort to build nests in the barren rocks of the Galápagos Islands in the hope of increasing the population of an endangered penguin species. Boersma is a UW professor of biology and Wadsworth Endowed Chair in Conservation Science.
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Down on the Farm, a Vibrant Community
No need to leave campus for the farm experience. The student-run UW Farm, tucked into a third of an acre on campus, is a working farm with ties to courses in everything from biology to anthropology to American Ethnic Studies.
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Pacific Northwesterners might be ‘weather wimps’ but science says it’s not our fault
Raymond B. Huey, professor emeritus of biology, discusses how humans adapt to hot weather.