ESPM post-doc researcher Guinevere Wogan published a research article to Biological Conservation on the global amphibian trade, particularly as it relates to population declines in Southeast Asian newts.
ESPM CE Specialist and adjunct professor Matteo Garbelotto is featured in this Washington Post article on sudden oak death and its rampant spread through coastal California. Garbelotto notes that awareness of sudden oak death is key, and that "we have been doing reserach for 15 years to come up with prescription and management guidelines to slow down the spread."
In this week’s inaugural special issue of Science Magazine on Sustainability Studies, ERG's Dan Kammen and Dr. Deborah Sunter explore the potential of using renewable energy technologies in urban areas to promote low-carbon, resilient, and livable cities.
ARE grad student Andrew Stevens and his research on quinoa pricing was featured in an article in The Economist on the global fad for quinoa and its effect on Andean peasants.
ESPM professor John Battles, alum Lenya Quinn-Davidson (B.S. '04) and Ph.D. candidate Kate Wilkin were highlighted in this Science article on cooperative extension programs across the US. Quinn-Davidson, a CE fire adviser, and Wilkin both participated in Graduate Students in Extension, a program launched by Battles and others that offers up to a year of funding for graduate students to conduct applied research projects and learn the principles of outreach.
ESPM CE Specialist and adjunct professor Matteo Garbelotto is featured in this Washington Post article on sudden oak death and its rampant spread through coastal California. Garbelotto notes that awareness of sudden oak death is key, and that "we have been doing reserach for 15 years to come up with prescription and management guidelines to slow down the spread."
ESPM assistant adjunct professor Eoin Brodie, deputy director of Berkeley Lab's Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division, co-authored a research editorial in mBio that calls for a predictive understanding of Earth's microbiomes to address maintaining our food, energy, and water supplies while inmproving the health of our population and ecosystems. Berkeley Lab will be participating in a new National Microbiome Initiative launched by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.