不良研究所

Veterinarian and Ph.D. candidate (NRS) weighs in on silvopastoralism, an alternative agricultural system that could address the environmental impacts of livestock, and provide farmers with social and economic benefits that include creating new jobs, developing new skills, reducing costs and improving their incomes.

Classified as: climate change, sustainability farming, Vivian Arguelles Gonzalez
Published on: 16 Mar 2022

Professor (Natural Resource Sciences) and Director of the Lyman Entomological Museum Jessica Gillung and Assistant Professor (Plant Science) Mehran Dastmalchi are among the eight 不良研究所 recipients of funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation John R. Evans Fund (JELF) and the Government of Quebec.

Classified as: funding announcement, CFI-JELF, Jessica Gillung, Mehran Dastmalchi
Published on: 2 Mar 2022

Is the greener future female? Here are three remarkable women including Elena Bennett, Research Chair (Tier 1) in Sustainability Science (NRS/BSE) leading the charge toward a more sustainable future in Canada and around the world.

Says Bennett, 鈥渨e used to talk a lot about nature thriving despite people, and then people thriving despite nature with Western expansion,鈥 she says. 鈥淟ater, it was, 鈥楬ow we can we set aside enough nature despite what people are doing?鈥 Now, we are looking at how people and nature interact and can thrive together.鈥

Classified as: elena bennett
Published on: 2 Feb 2022

Professors Murray Humphries, Director of the 不良研究所 Centre for Indigenous Peoples鈥 Nutrition and Environment (CINE), and Treena Delormier and Hugo Melgar-Quinonez, both from the School of Human Nutrition, will play key roles in the NFRF-T project, Biodiversity Conservation and the Health and Well-being of Indigenous Peoples, led by the University of A

Classified as: biodiversity, conservation, Hugo Melgar-Quinonez, Murray Humphries, Truth and Reconciliation, Treena Wasonti:io Delormier, CINE
Published on: 24 Jan 2022

Academic careers are built on many factors, including perseverance, thirst for new knowledge, and research papers. One of the measures of the impact of these outputs is the annual聽聽list from Clarivate.

Classified as: elena bennett, Jianguo Xia
Published on: 18 Nov 2021

To fully grasp and plan for climate impacts under any scenario, researchers and policymakers must look well beyond the 2100 benchmark. Unless CO2 emissions drop significantly, global warming by 2500 will make the Amazon barren, the American Midwest tropical, and India too hot to live in, according to a team of international scientists.

Classified as: co2, emissions, climate change, greenhouse gas, global warming, projections, 2500, Earth, alien, Sustainability
Published on: 13 Oct 2021

On October 8th, the Fonds de recherche du Qu茅bec - Nature et technologies (FRQNT), along with its partner the minist猫re de l'Agriculture, des P锚cheries et de l'Alimentation (MAPAQ) announced the creation of the R茅seau qu茅b茅cois de recherche en agriculture durable (RQRAD), a flagship measure of the (PAD).

Classified as: Paul Thomassin, rqrad, Sustainable agriculture
Published on: 13 Oct 2021

Today, the Fonds de recherche du Qu茅bec - Nature et technologies (FRQNT), along with its partner the minist猫re de l'Agriculture, des P锚cheries et de l'Alimentation (MAPAQ) announced the creation of the R茅seau qu茅b茅cois de recherche en agriculture durable (RQRAD), a flagship measure of the (PAD).

Classified as: Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Paul Thomassin, Fonds de recherche du Qu茅bec - Nature et technologies (FRQNT)
Published on: 8 Oct 2021

During the last year and a half, the world鈥檚 attention has been focused squarely on SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. While deadly, this virus is only one of many pathogens that threaten our well-being. For many years, scientists have been warning about another microscopic menace: drug-resistant microbes.

Classified as: health, Paul Thomassin, Jennifer Ronholm, covid-19
Published on: 4 Oct 2021

Congrats to (NRS/BSE), one of sixteen Canadian sustainability leaders (#Clean16 honourees) named to the Delta Management Group鈥檚 2022 list.

Classified as: Awards, elena bennett, sustainability research, Bieler School of Environment, clean 50
Published on: 27 Sep 2021

A study released this month found that as the climate changes in the North, some cold-adapted arctic birds are especially susceptible to heat stress.

Classified as: Arctic, bird, environment and sustainability, Emily Choy
Published on: 3 Aug 2021

Prestigious awards provide support to young scientists in Canada pursuing research in Canada鈥檚 North

Published on: 7 Jul 2021

The Arctic is warming at approximately twice the global rate. A new study led by researchers from 不良研究所 finds that cold-adapted Arctic species, like the thick-billed murre, are especially vulnerable to heat stress caused by climate change.

鈥淲e discovered that murres have the lowest cooling efficiency ever reported in birds, which means they have an extremely poor ability to dissipate or lose heat,鈥 says lead author Emily Choy, a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Natural Resource Sciences Department at 不良研究所.

Classified as: Arctic, climate change, heat stress, heat tolerance, seabirds, birds, thick-billed murre, Coats Island, Emily Choy, Sustainability
Published on: 7 Jul 2021

Congratulations to Pierre G. Langlois, B.Sc. (Agr)'78, CBIS (MIS)'90, the first of several members of the Macdonald community to be named an Unsung Hero as part of the University鈥檚 Bicentennial Celebrations!

Pierre lives the Macdonald motto 鈥淢astery for Service.鈥 Over the years, he has dedicated much of his time and energy to representing the interests of others and bettering the units and communities he serves.聽

Classified as: #不良研究所200
Published on: 18 Jun 2021

Using a Fitbit and a spy mic, scientists have discovered new insight into the behaviour of the elusive Canada lynx. A by researchers from 不良研究所, University of Alberta, and Trent University provides a first look at how miniaturized technology can open the door to remote wildlife monitoring.

Classified as: Canada lynx, sounds, behaviour, ecology, Sustainability, Emily Studd, Allyson Menzies, Murray Humphries
Published on: 31 May 2021

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