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Benjamin Z. Houlton is an environmental scientist and the Ronald. P. Lynch Dean of the Cornell University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. [1] Previously he served as the director of the John Muir Institute of the Environment at University of California, Davis [2]
The New York State College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University [1] (CALS or Ag School) is one of Cornell University's four statutory colleges, [2] [3] and is the only agricultural college in the Ivy League.
They are well-equipped biology teaching laboratories used to provide hands-on laboratory experience to Cornell undergraduate students. Currently, they are the home of the Investigative Biology Laboratory Course, [ 1 ] (BioG1500 [ 2 ] ), and frequently being used by the Cornell Institute for Biology Teachers, [ 3 ] the Disturbance Ecology course ...
The expansion provided studio and laboratory space for faculty and students. In 2003, Dean Patsy Brannon presided over the completion of a west wing addition to MVR Hall, providing space for the Division of Nutritional Sciences, including a human metabolic research unit as well as an interactive distance-learning classroom. [23]
The New York State Agricultural Experiment Station (NYSAES) at Geneva, Ontario County, New York State, is an agricultural experiment station operated by the New York State College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University. In August 2018, the station was rebranded as Cornell AgriTech, [1] but its official name remains unchanged. [2]
Mario Herrero (born 2 March 1967) is a professor of sustainable food systems and global change in the Cornell CALS Department of Global Development. He is also the director of Food Systems & Global Change, a Cornell Atkinson Scholar, and a Nancy and Peter Meinig Family Investigator in the Life Sciences.
Cornell Lab scientists, postdoctoral associates, students, and visiting scholars are carrying on much original research in behavioral ecology, conservation, education, evolutionary biology, information systems, and population genetics. Our scientists even harness weather radar data to study the movements of birds during migration.
eBird is an online database of bird observations providing scientists, researchers and amateur naturalists with real-time data about bird distribution and abundance.Originally restricted to sightings from the Western Hemisphere, the project expanded to include New Zealand in 2008, [1] and again expanded to cover the whole world in June 2010.