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Last SEFS Seminar of the quarter will ask, “Do interactions among different fungal guilds control carbon cycling in forest soils?”
The last SEFS Seminar of Spring Quarter 2021 will be on carbon cycling in forest soils.
Peter Kennedy, a mycologist and associate professor in the University of Minnesota’s Department of Plant and Microbial Biology” will present, “Do interactions among different fungal guilds control carbon cycling in forest soils?” at 3:30 p.m.
2021 SEFS Year-End Awards winners announced
Every spring, the UW School of Environmental and Forest Sciences recognizes a number of people within the SEFS community for their efforts over the previous year. Given the difficulties of the past year and a half, the SEFS Awards Committee opted to award two people per award.
Read moreStudent Profile: BSE graduate student develops ‘smart’ paper to protect clean drinking water
When Sheila Goodman found out a significant amount of the world’s clean drinking water is lost due to inadequate infrastructure like leaking pipes, she sought a solution.Five years later, she created an inexpensive remote water sensor, made from sustainable materials, that detect leaks and prevents water damage and protects the water.
Read moreSEFS Director Dan Brown’s Spring 2021 Letter
Dear SEFS community:
As we enter the final weeks of Spring Quarter 2021, and we look forward to longer days and the summer field season, we are grateful for the prospect of greater freedom of movement and more in-person learning and research in the future.
3 SEFS community members named to COMPASS’s 2021 Wilburforce Leaders in Conservation Science cohort
Three UW School of Environmental and Forest Sciences (SEFS) community members have been named to COMPASS’s 2021 Wilburforce Leaders in Conservation Science cohort.
L. Monika Moskal, SEFS Professor and Associate Director; Julia Michalak, SEFS research scientist; and Keala Hagmann, of Applegate Forestry LLC and SEFS; were all named to the 2021 cohort.
Forest Bathing is the new mindfulness practice to know
Mindfulness has become a sought-after activity in today’s fast paced world to lower anxiety, ease stress and find balance. And forest bathing takes mindfulness to the woods.
So what is forest bathing?
SEFS researchers prove maple syrup no longer just for Vermont, Canada
For many, the idea of maple syrup production evokes images of snowy forests in Vermont and Canada. But one UW School of Environmental and Forest Sciences researcher wondered, why not the Pacific Northwest?
Read moreSEFS researchers find climate change reduced greenness on Arctic-boreal lakes by 15 percent
UW School of Environmental and Forest Sciences Ph.D. student Catherine Kuhn and SEFS Associate Professor David Butman have co-authored a recently published study on how climate change is affecting Arctic-boreal lakes.
Read moreUW Predator-Prey Project highlighted by The Spokesman-Review
An ongoing study of the relationships between Washington predators and their prey that involves three UW School of Environmental and Forest Sciences graduate students received new attention last month. That’s because the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife released a 13-minute video at a WA DNR commission meeting to show the purpose of the multiyear study, according to a recent story by The Spokesman-Review.
Read moreSEFS Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee’s work highlighted in news story
The work of the School of Environmental and Forest Sciences‘ Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee (DEI) has been highlighted in a news story on the UW College of the Environment‘s blog.
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