
A symposium in the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research will showcase work by its graduate students, April 7 and 8.
A symposium in the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research will showcase work by its graduate students, April 7 and 8.
A grant of $500,000 will allow a UWindsor team to analyze bacterial DNA from water samples.
Irradiating sediment could speed reclamation of petroleum tailings ponds.
An article on the importance creating a global centralized network where researchers share aquatic species monitoring data to properly manage aquatic resources on a global scale.
Areas as varied as animal behaviour, genetics and toxicology will come under the microscope this week at a GLIER symposium.
In Microbial Life in Extreme Environments: the Good, the Bad and the Ugly, UWindsor professor Christopher Weisener will discuss the underestimated importance of bacteria in a Science Café at Canada South Science City, at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, February 18. The session is designed for the general public, and there is no admission charge.
Researcher Farah Chan has found that the shorter the voyage, the more invaders survive a cross-oceanic trip.
A UWindsor professor will deliver a lecture Wednesday on the use of data from fish ear bones to determine their history of environmental exposure.
Hugh MacIsaac has been named Canada Research Chair in Aquatic Invasive Species.
A graduate student trying to determine how climate change is affecting Arctic animals like ringed seals who rely on very specific food resources, has become the first University of Windsor student ever to receive a scholarship of its kind in order to continue his research in the north.