A University of Idaho-led team of researchers found that experimental fences reduced the number of times elephants left Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park to raid nearby crops by 80-95%.
articles
Fish More Tolerant Than Expected to Low Oxygen Events
Fish may be more tolerant than previously thought to periods of low oxygen in the oceans, new research shows.
New Treatment May Reverse Celiac Disease
Results of a new phase 2 clinical trial using technology developed at Northwestern Medicine show it is possible to induce immune tolerance to gluten in individuals with celiac disease.
Moderate Use of Screen Time Can Be Good for Your Health, New Study Finds
Research by the Oxford Internet Institute at Oxford University, carried out in partnership with researchers at Cardiff University and Cambridge University, has found that moderate levels of screen time can have a positive effect on children’s wellbeing and mental health.
Citizen Scientists are Helping to Keep the Study of Dinosaurs Alive
When I moved to Alberta in 1976 to become the curator of paleontology at the Provincial Museum of Alberta (now the Royal Alberta Museum), I was hamstrung by a lack of funding and an attitude that suggested there was no point in putting money into collecting dinosaurs because there were none left.
Prof Honoured for Decades of Asparagus Development
Prof. David Wolyn, Department of Plant Agriculture, is the University of Guelph’s Innovation of the Year award winner for 2019.