Tina Eshleman, University Advancement |
November 15, 2021
Andrea Wright, Jinlan Liu Asian and Pacific Islander American Studies (APIA) Faculty Research Award recipient, plans to use the funds to support a research project focused on the impact of green energy projects on people’s lives in India, Kuwait and Virginia.
The Elizabeth River Project (ERP) has teamed with researchers from the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and William & 玛丽 to build an online mapping tool that can help the non-profit and other community partners better incorporate environmental justice issues into planning and restoration efforts.
April 18 to 24 marks this year’s Earth Week celebration hosted by William & 玛丽 Sustainability, giving the campus the opportunity to come together, listen and learn about the planet and each other.
New research shows that biodiversity is important not just at the traditional scale of short-term plot experiments, but when measured over decades and across regional landscapes as well.
The annual update of their sea level “report cards” by researchers at William & 玛丽’s Virginia Institute of Marine Science adds further evidence of an accelerating rate of sea-level rise at nearly all tidal stations along the U.S. coastline.
A bird that since John James Audubon’s time has scurried under the radar of all but the most attentive ornithologists, conservationists and naturalists has received protection from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Bryan Watts, the director of William & 玛丽’s Center for Conservation Biology, and Fletcher Smith, a research associate at the CCB, are part of an effort to share animal-tracking data to get a handle on what is ahead for the diverse animal populations of the changing Arctic and near-Arctic habitats.
Bryan Watts, W&M’s Center for Conservation Biology |
November 4, 2020
The Piney Grove Preserve has shifted from receiving red-cockaded woodpeckers from other populations to donating woodpeckers. The movement marks a milestone in the recovery of the species and is a testament to the valuable work of W&M’s Center for Conservation Biology.
William & 玛丽 Libraries is adding a new space with people who love the outdoors in mind. The Libraries announced it will begin constructing a patio outside of Swem in December.
John Swaddle, faculty director at William & 玛丽’s Institute for Integrative Conservation, and a group of graduate students have published a paper evaluating a new window-film product designed to reduce bird-window collisions.
A rash of deer deaths in the College Woods is likely the result in an overabundance of biting midges, according to Randy Chambers, director of William & 玛丽’s Keck Environmental Laboratory.
For the past seven years, Dorothy Ibes has been using William & 玛丽’s outdoor space as a laboratory to understand the relationship between human health and human access to nature.