je.st
news
Tag: biologist
Why the Monarch butterfly population has declined and what local biologist plan to do about it
2016-07-04 20:33:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
the sun: Habitat conservation and restoration Why the Monarch butterfly population has declined and what local biologist plan to do about it San Bernardino National Forest biologists look for monarch caterpillars on milkweed plants near Big Bear Lake Thursday. The orange and black monarch butterfly has become less common in the region due to the loss of the milkweed habitat, but San Bernardino National Forest Service has been at work to restore the plant for the monarch butterfly population. The large orange...
Biologist creates for himself one sweet, post-Pfizer gig
2014-01-05 16:03:37| Biotech - Topix.net
After biologist Mark Thiede was laid off from his job at Pfizer Inc. in Groton, he spent his retraining money on barista school in Oregon then opened his own coffee shop, Two Wrasslin' Cats, in East Haddam.
Tags: sweet
creates
gig
biologist
City biologist spots bear along Bull Run River
2013-09-18 19:59:50| PortlandOnline
On KATU.com, September 17, 2013
Graze and end climate change, biologist says
2013-08-07 16:00:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Green Blog: Jim Laurie figures hes heard the solution to climate change: bring on the cows. Or sheep. Or just about any grazing animals. Laurie is a proponent of a method of restoring exhausted land that is causing a stirif not yet an avalancheof interest among ranchers, farmers and environmentalists. It involves bringing livestock onto spent and unproductive land for a short tour of munchingmaybe a day, a few days, or a week. If theres not enough to eat, bring feed to them, he says. What the animals...
Drought, river fragmentation forcing endangered fish out of water, biologist finds
2013-06-06 18:36:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
ScienceDaily: A Kansas State University researcher is discovering that the North American drought has caused dramatic changes in native fish communities. "A couple of key species that we have been studying have virtually disappeared where they historically were abundant," said Keith Gido, professor of biology who researches fish ecology and conservation of aquatic systems. Gido and his team study state and federal endangered and threatened fish species in river ecosystems, including the Arkansas, Kansas,...