<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Berryman Institute News | Utah State University</title><link>https://qanr.usu.edu/berryman-institute/news/index.xml</link><description>All the latest news about the Berryman Institute's current research, education, and outreach, affiliate faculty and graduate students.</description><image><url>https://templateresources.usu.edu/_resources/assets/images/U-State.png</url><title>Utah State University</title><link>https://qanr.usu.edu/</link></image><language>en-us</language><category>News</category><item><title>Over 260 Global Scientists Unite on Urgent Call for Wildlife Protection for Sake of Climate</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/over-260-global-scientists-unite-on-urgent-call-for-wildlife-protection-for-sake-of-climate/?nl=3076&amp;utm_source=todaynewsletter&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=nl3076&amp;utm_content=over-260-global-scientists-unite-on-urgent-call-for-wildlife-protection-for-sake-of-climate</link><description>Trisha Atwood in USU's Department of Watershed Sciences is part of the global effort that resulted in a call on governments to explicitly include wildlife and their ecological roles in climate policy.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 11 June 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Sustainable Wildfire Management Techniques to be Discussed at Upcoming Research Landscapes</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/sustainable-wildfire-management-techniques-to-be-discussed-at-upcoming-research-landscapes/?nl=3075&amp;utm_source=todaynewsletter&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=nl3075&amp;utm_content=sustainable-wildfire-management-techniques-to-be-discussed-at-upcoming-research-landscapes</link><description>Utah State University is hosting a discussion that will include affiliate Larissa Yocom, on how effective our current wildfire management strategies actually are, and in what ways they might be making the problem worse.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 9 June 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>When Human Movement Changes, Different Animal Species Respond in Their Own Ways</title><link>https://www.si.edu/newsdesk/releases/when-human-movement-changes-different-animal-species-respond-their-own-ways</link><description>Tracking animal adaptations during the COVID-19 lockdown, scientists show how human presence and habitat modifications affect the way animals behave.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 21 May 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>When Humans Went Away, the Wildlife Strayed</title><link>https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/21/science/anthropause-animals-pandemic.html?unlocked_article_code=1.kFA.glXq.oqpH6izTfIwq&amp;smid=url-share</link><description>When people disappeared from the landscape, as they did during the pandemic, wild animals changed how they used space and resources, scientists found.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 21 May 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Wildlife is Watching Us, Too — and Changing Their Behavior in Response</title><link>https://news.yale.edu/2026/05/21/wildlife-watching-us-too-and-changing-their-behavior-response</link><description>A Yale-led analysis of millions of animal movements reveals how the mere presence of people, not just landscape change, can reshape how species use space and environment, with implications for conservation efforts.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 21 May 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>PBS Series 'Shared Planet' Features Riverscapes Restored by USU and Beavers, Nature's Engineers</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/pbs-series-shared-planet-features-riverscapes-restored-by-usu-and-beavers-natures-engineers</link><description>A screening party for the Shared Planet: Waters episode and a panel discussion with wildlife biologist Nate Norman, Professor Joe Wheaton and rancher Jay Wilde.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 21 May 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Black bear spotted Downriver; Rockwood Police warn public "do not approach"</title><link>https://www.audacy.com/wwjnewsradio/news/local/black-bear-spotted-downriver-rockwood</link><description>Recent sightings have more people wondering if bears are moving into the Metro Detroit area. Utah State University PhD student Taylor Peltier studies black bears in the northern Lower Peninsula as part of the Baldwin Bear Project. She tells WWJ radio’s Am</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 12 May 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Are Urban Coyotes Actually Bolder? A Scientific Comparison</title><link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZ22GHxHAKs</link><description>Do coyotes living in the city behave differently than those in the countryside? In this video, we dive into a massive behavioral study conducted across 16 U.S. cities to test one specific trait: boldness. Using "novel object tests" and camera traps, we re</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 29 April 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah law leaves little room for wolves in Northern Utah</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/utah-law-leaves-little-room-for-wolves-in-northern-utah/</link><description>The recent lethal removal of three wolves in Cache County has renewed a long-running question in Utah wildlife management: not just whether wolves belong in the state, but whether they are allowed to play any ecological role at all. </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 22 April 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>USU’s Natural Resources Camp helps students break barriers and sharpen skills</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/usus-natural-resources-camp-helps-students-break-barriers-and-sharpen-skills/</link><description>For the past four years, the Color Country Natural Resources Camp has been an opportunity for students to learn and practice skills that they will take with them into their fields, as well as to break down barriers between their peers. </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 22 April 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>From the Great Barrier Reef to Great Salt Lake: Inside USU’s marine ecology program</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/from-the-great-barrier-reef-to-great-salt-lake-inside-usus-marine-ecology-program/</link><description>Cuttlefish eggs sit in tanks at Utah State University’s aquatic ecology lab, adjusting to different salinity levels — a climate change experiment happening in the mountains, 800 miles from any ocean. This is marine science in a landlocked state. USU launc</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 21 April 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>How USU students can find jobs in natural resources</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/how-usu-students-can-find-jobs-in-natural-resources/</link><description>Utah State University students studying natural resources are navigating a changing job landscape as federal hiring freezes and shifting government priorities affect available jobs and planned career paths.  </description><pubDate>Tuesday, 21 April 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Courtney Flint Named Associate Director of Utah Water Research Laboratory</title><link>https://uwrl.usu.edu/news/main-feed/2026/courtney-flint-named-associate-director-of-utah-water-research-laboratory</link><description>The Utah Water Research Lab welcomes Courtney Flint, a USU professor in the Department of Environment and Society, as an associate director.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 15 April 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Differences in Urban and Rural Coyote Behavior</title><link>https://www.kpcw.org/podcast/this-green-earth/2026-03-31/differences-in-urban-and-rural-coyote-behavior</link><description>Pepperdine University biology professor Dr. Javier Monzon shares his findings from a new study on urban coyotes. He discusses the differences between urban and rural coyotes and even a new hybrid subspecies.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 31 March 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Wily coyote? Urban canines take more risks compared with rural ones, study finds</title><link>https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/27/urban-rural-coyote-study</link><description>Researchers believe behavioral gap, which may hold true across species, is probably product of less fear of harassment in cities. Coyotes in cities seem to be bolder as well and less afraid of new experiences. That’s according to a new study that research</description><pubDate>Friday, 27 March 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah’s historic snow drought is one that trees will likely never forget</title><link>https://www.kuer.org/science-environment/2026-03-27/utahs-historic-snow-drought-is-one-that-trees-will-likely-never-forget</link><description>Utah’s towering ponderosa pines are tough customers. They can live for hundreds of years, surviving harsh conditions at high altitudes. But even giants have a breaking point. This winter was Utah’s warmest on record, and statewide snowpack has cratered to</description><pubDate>Friday, 27 March 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>In Mount Pisgah euthanasia effort, shot coyote vanished into thicket</title><link>https://lookouteugene-springfield.com/story/environment/2026/03/25/in-mount-pisgah-euthanasia-effort-shot-coyote-vanished-into-thicket/</link><description>A wildlife contractor shot a habituated coyote at Mount Pisgah, tracking it to a dense blackberry thicket, suggesting the animal did not immediately die. Questions remain about humane euthanization and whether habitat pressures — including growing use of </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 25 March 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>This Year's Snow Drought is Etching Itself Into Utah Forest History</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/this-years-snow-drought-is-etching-itself-into-utah-forest-history</link><description>Trees in the West are remarkably flexible — they endure extended droughts, sweltering summers and subzero winters as part of a wildly variable climate. Even so, this year’s snow drought is going to leave a mark.</description><pubDate>Friday, 20 March 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>In Utah’s desert, a small bird inspires a big conservation community</title><link>https://www.upr.org/people/isabelle-burky-1</link><description>Chukar partridges are small, ground-dwelling birds native to the high deserts of the Middle East and Asia. But they've also been found in Utah since the 1930s. They have striking red legs, a conspicuous black band across their face, and somewhat of a cult</description><pubDate>Thursday, 12 March 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>New USU Lab Space Opens Inside Loveland Living Planet Aquarium</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/new-usu-lab-space-opens-inside-loveland-living-planet-aquarium/?nl=2061&amp;utm_source=todaynewsletter&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=nl2061&amp;utm_content=new-usu-lab-space-opens-inside-loveland-living-planet-aquarium</link><description>The Loveland Living Planet Aquarium in Draper, Utah, recently celebrated the grand opening of the Sam &amp; Aline Skaggs Science Learning Center, including lab and classroom space dedicated specifically for Utah State University students. </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 25 February 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>City and Country Coyotes: New Research Finds Increased Boldness in Urban Animals</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/city-and-country-coyotes-new-research-finds-increased-boldness-in-urban-animals</link><description>Coyotes are natural scaredy cats, according to new nationwide research led by Julie Young from Utah State University’s Department of Wildland Resources. Their fear of all things new is an ingrained behavior that helps them avoid trouble and ultimately sur</description><pubDate>Friday, 20 February 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Lit Up Livestock? It Could Reduce Losses for Montana Ranchers Read More: FlashTags Could Revolutionize Livestock Protection In The West</title><link>https://mooseradio.com/ixp/117/p/flashtags-livestock-protection/</link><description>Imagine blinking beef, lighted lambs, or glowing goats. Silly as it may sound, it just might be a helpful new way to protect valuable livestock.</description><pubDate>Friday, 13 February 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>USU Bioinformatics and Artificial Intelligence Lab Receives $1.9M to Develop Avian Flu Treatments</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/usu-bioinformatics-and-artificial-intelligence-lab-receives-19m-to-develop-avian-flu-treatments</link><description>Highly-pathogenic avian influenza is a growing problem, both in agriculture and beyond. Waterfowl are the primary carriers, but the virus easily spreads to other birds and has made the jump to other species, from cattle to even elephant seals on remote So</description><pubDate>Thursday, 5 February 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Troublesome turkeys find new home in Carbon County</title><link>https://gephardtdaily.com/local/troublesome-turkeys-find-new-home-in-carbon-county/</link><description>A batch of designated “nuisance” turkeys were released to their new home where state wildlife officials hope they’ll behave themselves. </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 4 February 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>USU ecologists weigh in on wolves killed near Avon</title><link>https://www.hjnews.com/tremonton/news/usu-ecologists-weigh-in-on-wolves-killed-near-avon/article_f5ec50bc-207d-40c1-9eef-16765e842f27.html</link><description>Three days after the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources confirmed the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food’s lethal removal of three wolves found west of Avon, Utah State University ecologists weighed in on the subject, as reported by Utah State Today</description><pubDate>Monday, 2 February 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>USU Ecologists Offer Expert Perspective About Gray Wolves Found in Cache Valley</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/usu-ecologists-offer-expert-perspective-about-gray-wolves-found-in-cache-valley</link><description>State officials recently killed three gray wolves near Avon, Utah, in the southwestern corner of Cache County. Wildlife ecology experts from the Department of Wildland Resources at Utah State University answered questions about wolves in Utah.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 29 January 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Southern Utah’s most common forest stands at a crossroads</title><link>https://www.stgeorgeutah.com/life/explore/southern-utah-s-most-common-forest-stands-at-a-crossroads/article_d2bb17f4-845a-45eb-b473-ead4bcb74f0f.html</link><description>Pinyon-juniper woodlands provide food for rare birds, cover for predator species and wood for Southern Utahns, and they dominate the state's forests. But land managers face a paradox: while many pinyon-juniper species are declining due to climate stress, </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 28 January 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Six Easy Fixes for Wildfire THEY Don’t Want You to Know About</title><link>https://utahstatemagazine.usu.edu/environment/six-easy-fixes-for-wildfire-they-dont-want-you-to-know-about/</link><description>Forests of the West are complicated places made up of thousands of interconnected parts — animals and insects, plants and trees, fungi, bacteria, soil, water, and people — operating in cycles that can last from seconds to centuries, on scales from bacteri</description><pubDate>Thursday, 22 January 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>New critique prompts correction of high-profile Yellowstone aspen study, highlighting challenges in measuring ecosystem response to wolf reintroduction</title><link>https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1113559</link><description>Lack of young aspen trees across most sampled sites complicates the story of “widespread” aspen recovery after wolf reintroduction.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 21 January 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Did Wolves Really Transform Yellowstone? New Analysis Says No</title><link>https://scitechdaily.com/did-wolves-really-transform-yellowstone-new-analysis-says-no/</link><description>A new peer-reviewed study reports that claims of a “world-leading” trophic cascade in Yellowstone National Park are not supported, citing problems with the methods used in earlier research.</description><pubDate>Saturday, 10 January 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Bobcat caught on doorbell camera in Southern Utah: What you need to know about the wild cat species</title><link>https://www.abc4.com/animals/utah-wildlife/bobcat-caught-doorbell-camera-southern-utah/</link><description>After a doorbell camera captured footage of a bobcat in southern Utah, a wildlife specialist is sharing a bit more information about bobcats in Utah and how to avoid issues with bobcats.</description><pubDate>Monday, 5 January 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Coyotes mate for life—and grieve when their partner dies</title><link>https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/coyote-love-grief-science</link><description>Scientists hope understanding coyote widowhood will someday help humans in their own grief. </description><pubDate>Friday, 2 January 2026</pubDate></item><item><title>Did reintroducing Wolves to Yellowstone really cause an ecological cascade?</title><link>https://www.livescience.com/animals/land-mammals/did-reintroducing-wolves-to-yellowstone-really-cause-an-ecological-cascade</link><description>Previous research on the effect of wolves on the food web has been criticized, raising questions about the predator’s role in the Yellowstone ecosystem.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 30 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah’s wildlife don’t seem too bothered by the warmer winter so far</title><link>https://www.kuer.org/science-environment/2025-12-23/utahs-wildlife-dont-seem-too-bothered-by-the-warmer-winter-so-far</link><description>Utahns, including the wildlife, have felt the unseasonably warm fall and the winter’s warmer temperatures. Normally, winter weather is the sign for many species to begin their yearly traditions. In the short term, the warmer temperatures are actually help</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 23 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Democracy and Education Increase Women’s Belief in Climate Change</title><link>https://eos.org/articles/democracy-and-education-increase-womens-belief-in-climate-change</link><description>Women and gender minorities, especially in lower-income countries, generally bear a greater burden than men do with regard to the impacts of climate change. The finding, which focuses on lower-income countries, could help inform plans to shrink the global</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 23 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Episode 87: 12/18/2025 - Research into Non-Lethal Methods to Protect Livestock From Mountain Lions</title><link>https://www.cfbf.com/ag-news/voice-of-california-agriculture-podcast</link><description>Researchers are trying to protect livestock from mountain lions.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 18 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Eight College of Education and Human Services Scholars Ranked in the Top 2% of Global Researchers</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/eight-college-of-education-and-human-services-scholars-ranked-in-the-top-2-of-global-researchers</link><description>Elsevier Research, a research and global technology company, works with universities around the world to gather and share important research discoveries. Based on Elsevier’s analysis, in 2024, eight faculty members from the Emma Eccles Jones College of Ed</description><pubDate>Monday, 15 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Mercury Rising</title><link>https://www.biographic.com/mercury-rising/</link><description>When Alaska’s wolves began eating sea otters, it looked like a story of adaptation. Then they started getting sick.</description><pubDate>Friday, 12 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Have Wolves Saved Yellowstone’s Aspens?</title><link>https://mountainjournal.org/have-wolves-saved-aspen-trees-in-yellowstone-national-park/</link><description>Claims that wolves have rescued Yellowstone National Park aspen trees through a ‘trophic cascade’ oversimplify a complex story.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 9 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah drought conditions push deer into neighborhoods and croplands</title><link>https://www.upr.org/utah-news/2025-12-08/utah-drought-conditions-push-deer-into-neighborhoods-and-croplands</link><description>It feels like deer are showing up everywhere lately — our yards, along neighborhood sidewalks, and crossing busy roads — you’re not just imagining it.</description><pubDate>Monday, 8 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Come feel the sunshine with Dr. Brosi</title><link>https://usueasterneagle.com/2025/12/04/come-feel-the-sunshine-with-dr-brosi/</link><description>Utah State University Eastern offers a wide variety of majors and educational paths, including Wildland Resources. Sunshine Brosi is a professor in the Wildlife Resources field in the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources. She runs the Wildlife Eco</description><pubDate>Thursday, 4 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Simple Flashing Ear Tag Technology Shows Promise for Deterring Livestock Predators</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/simple-flashing-ear-tag-technology-shows-promise-for-deterring-livestock-predators</link><description>Wolves, bears, cougars and coyotes are important parts of ecosystems of the West — and a pain in the rump roast for people who raise livestock there. A simple technology shows promise toward alleviating some of that conflict, according to Julie Young, a w</description><pubDate>Monday, 1 December 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>New research shows drought conditions drive deer populations to croplands, urban environments</title><link>https://kslnewsradio.com/environment-outdoors/new-research-shows-drought-conditions-drive-deer-populations-to-croplands-urban-environments/2265485/</link><description>New research from Utah State University tracked movements of mule deer during drought and found that when water content in plants dropped to a specific low, deer will abandon their natural habitat for irrigated croplands and urban landscaping.</description><pubDate>Sunday, 30 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Home on the Grains: Drought Drives Deer to Irrigated Croplands, Urban Landscaping</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/home-on-the-grains-drought-drives-deer-to-irrigated-croplands-urban-landscaping/?nl=1052&amp;utm_source=todaynewsletter&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=nl1052&amp;utm_content=home-on-the-grains-drought-drives-deer-to-irrigated-croplands-urban-landscaping</link><description>Mule deer that call Utah home have to be tough — freezing winters and scorching summers are part of a typical year. But as droughts in the West get longer and more severe, these animals are being forced to move further afield to find the resources they ne</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 25 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>USU EASTERN FACULTY SUNSHINE BROSI DELIVERS INAUGURAL LECTURE CELEBRATING FULL PROFESSORSHIP</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/usu-eastern-faculty-sunshine-brosi-delivers-inaugural-lecture-celebrating-full-professorship</link><description>Utah State University Eastern faculty, staff and students gathered on Oct. 31 to celebrate the inaugural lecture of Sunshine Brosi, professor of wildland resources and director of the graduate program in Natural Resources statewide and the Price campus’s </description><pubDate>Friday, 14 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah State team launches study to pinpoint drivers of avian botulism on Great Salt Lake</title><link>https://citizenportal.ai/articles/6804010/Utah/Utah-State-team-launches-study-to-pinpoint-drivers-of-avian-botulism-on-Great-Salt-Lake</link><description>A Utah State University research team told the Great Salt Lake Advisory Council it is launching a multi‑year investigation into avian botulism on the Great Salt Lake, with the aim of identifying where and why outbreaks start and whether the toxin can be t</description><pubDate>Thursday, 13 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>The Problem of Wildfire: What Solutions Can Science Offer?</title><link>https://wilkescenter.utah.edu/speaker/larissa-yocom-utah-forest-restoration-institute/</link><description>Wildfire in the western US is an ecological phenomenon and a societal problem. Ecologically, many fires burn in areas where countless fires have burned in the past. Fires reset ecosystems, and plants and animals are often able to take advantage of recentl</description><pubDate>Thursday, 13 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Invasive Fox Squirrels Move Into Utah, Pushing out Native Red Squirrels</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/invasive-fox-squirrels-move-into-utah-pushing-out-native-red-squirrels/?brid=I0_qAEvqei18F-RAIqAnCQ</link><description>Fox squirrels, the largest tree squirrels in North America, have made their way into Utah and are quickly becoming noticeable residents along the Wasatch Front.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 12 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>New research reveals rapid shrinking of Mount Rainier</title><link>https://www.cachevalleydaily.com/news/new-research-reveals-rapid-shrinking-of-mount-rainier/article_4de20cba-a665-4a68-ba2f-0e11bf8b11c8.html</link><description>New research from Scott Hotaling of Utah State University and Eric Gilbertson of Seattle University indicates the five year-round frozen peaks in the continental United States are melting faster than many thought possible.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 12 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>A ‘squirrelly’ issue: USU experts say invasive wildlife species continues to pose problems for native squirrels</title><link>https://www.abc4.com/animals/utah-wildlife/usu-experts-warn-invasive-squirrel-species/</link><description>Invasive fox squirrels are moving into Utah, posing a threat to native red squirrels. According to wildlife specialists with Utah State University (USU), an invasive species of squirrels has moved to Colorado and Utah from the East Coast and is pushing ou</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 11 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>U.S. ranchers test high-tech, wildlife-friendly alternatives to barbed wire</title><link>https://www.npr.org/2025/11/05/nx-s1-5529295/u-s-ranchers-test-high-tech-wildlife-friendly-alternatives-to-barbed-wire</link><description>Barbed wire shaped the American West, but it kills, injures and blocks migrating wildlife. Some ranchers are trying high-tech alternatives that could reduce the need for it.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 5 November 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Wildlife Overpass in Utah Drastically Lowers Collisions with Nonhuman Animals</title><link>https://veganfta.com/articles/2025/10/28/wildlife-overpass-in-utah-drastically-lowers-collisions-with-nonhuman-animals/</link><description>New research is highlighting the remarkable impact of the Parleys Canyon wildlife overpass on Interstate 80 near Park City, Utah, US, documenting a significant reduction in wildlife collisions and cost savings for the local community.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 28 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Love our wildlife, but not to death</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/feeder-stations-may-love-red-squirrels-to-death/</link><description>USU Extension Wildlife Specialist here. I am glad that students and faculty across campus are enjoying our squirrels and finding fun ways to interact with local wildlife. Unfortunately, the feeder stations may love red squirrels to death. Quite literally.</description><pubDate>Monday, 27 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>A Higher Purpose</title><link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WvM9HVfTIyk&amp;t=469s</link><description>This documentary shines a light on the remarkable work being done at Utah’s universities to address some of the world’s most pressing challenges. From advancing public health and pioneering new technologies to protecting the environment and promoting soci</description><pubDate>Saturday, 25 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Whale and Dolphin Migrations are Being Disrupted by Climate Change</title><link>https://insideclimatenews.org/news/24102025/marine-mammal-migrations-disrupted-by-climate-change/</link><description>Rising ocean temperatures, heatwaves and dwindling prey are forcing marine mammals into new and more dangerous waters, scientists warn.</description><pubDate>Friday, 24 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Swaner Preserve to showcase Utah State’s climate adaption program</title><link>https://www.parkrecord.com/2025/10/22/swaner-preserve-to-showcase-utah-states-climate-adaption-program/</link><description>How is Utah changing? What is being done about it at local and statewide levels? How can people contribute? Swaner Preserve &amp; EcoCenter aimed to provide insight into these questions and more as part of an Oct. 28 event titled “Learning to Leading: How USU</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 22 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Gov. Spencer Cox signs GSL 2034 to save Great Salt Lake</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/gov-spencer-cox-signs-gsl-2034-to-save-the-great-salt-lake/</link><description>The Great Salt Lake has been at unhealthy water levels for over a decade now, with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration saying it reached a historic low of 4,188.5 feet in 2022. To combat the continual shrinking of the lake, Gov. Spencer Co</description><pubDate>Monday, 20 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>USU's Report to Governor &amp; Legislature Underscores Utah's Emerging Energy, Water Needs</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/usus-report-to-governor-amp-legislature-underscores-utahs-emerging-energy-water-needs</link><description>Utah State University’s Janet Quinney Lawson Institute for Land, Water and Air released its annual Report to the Governor and Legislature on Thursday, offering a collaborative and expert look at some of the state’s pressing issues related to land, water a</description><pubDate>Thursday, 16 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>From odors to ecosystems: Rabbitbrush's vital role in Southern Utah ecosystems</title><link>https://www.stgeorgeutah.com/news/from-odors-to-ecosystems-rabbitbrushs-vital-role-in-southern-utah-ecosystems/article_165ef024-8379-4f8d-a69d-e7f65ad45644.html</link><description>Rabbitbrush is lighting up Southern Utah with yellow flowers, attracting an array of bees, beetles and butterflies. And while this plant may trigger some allergies, experts say it plays a crucial role in the desert landscape.</description><pubDate>Friday, 10 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Barbed wire fences dot the West. There’s a growing movement to take them down -- for wildlife</title><link>https://www.kunc.org/regional-news/2025-10-08/barbed-wire-fences-dot-the-west-theres-a-growing-movement-to-take-them-down-for-wildlife</link><description>The Barbed Wire Warriors is an initiative of Wild Aware, a grassroots group based in Evergreen, Colo., that formed six years ago to reduce collisions between animals and cars in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 8 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Researcher Seeks Input on Human Tolerance for Bison</title><link>https://flatheadbeacon.com/2025/10/06/researcher-seeks-input-on-human-tolerance-for-bison/</link><description>Patrick Kelly is a PhD candidate at Utah State University studying the “social tolerance” people have for Yellowstone bison. He’s now launched a survey to learn what people living in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming think about their Yellowstone bison neighbors</description><pubDate>Monday, 6 October 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>USU researchers want you to carry bear spray</title><link>https://kslnewsradio.com/environment-outdoors/usu-bear-spray-research/2248735/</link><description>There are a lot more people running into bears around Yellowstone National Park, and a Utah researcher said people need to seriously consider carrying bear spray.</description><pubDate>Friday, 26 September 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Our Town: How Park City restored a rare Utah ecosystem</title><link>https://townlift.com/2025/09/our-town-how-park-city-restored-a-rare-utah-ecosystem/</link><description>How the Swaner Preserve and EcoCenter became Park City's living laboratory for conservation and community connection.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 25 September 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Professor Honored in Long Line of USU Sociology Researchers</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/professor-honored-in-long-line-of-usu-sociology-researchers</link><description>Utah State University Sociology Professor Jessica D. Ulrich-Schad has been named the 2025 recipient of the William R. Freudenburg Award of Merit from the Rural Sociological Society. She was recently honored at the Natural Resources Research Interest Group</description><pubDate>Thursday, 25 September 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Grizzlies Were Raiding Montana Farms. Then Came Some Formidable Dogs.</title><link>https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/22/climate/montana-grizzly-bears-guard-dogs.html?unlocked_article_code=1.Yk8.f5rX.UrsNdD5BQXwI&amp;smid=url-share</link><description>Bears have recently acquired a fondness for the good eating found around grain bins on Montana’s plains. That’s a big problem for humans and grizzlies alike. Dogs are an important strategy in a complicated quest for coexistence, according to a growing num</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 24 September 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Warming climate, not herd size, is biggest threat to rangelands</title><link>https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2025/09/warming-climate-not-herd-size-biggest-threat-rangelands</link><description>Overgrazing has long been seen as a key factor in rangeland degradation – and is the reason for herd-size restrictions or livestock taxes that in some places can limit herders’ ability to make a living. But a new Cornell study points to another variable: </description><pubDate>Thursday, 18 September 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>‘Good News We Could All Use’: Utah Shares Positives Of Wildlife Bridge</title><link>https://unofficialnetworks.com/2025/09/13/utah-wildlife-bridge-study/</link><description>A recent study from Utah State University shows how effective a wildlife bridge has been at preventing collisions. More coverage on this topic can be found at NBC10 Boston.</description><pubDate>Saturday, 13 September 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Swaner Preserve &amp; EcoCenter invites the community to an open-house environment</title><link>https://www.parkrecord.com/2025/09/12/swaner-preserve-ecocenter-invites-the-community-to-an-open-house-environment/</link><description>Community members learned about the Swaner Preserve &amp; EcoCenter and gave their input regarding the nonprofit's soon-to-be established strategic plan during an open house.</description><pubDate>Friday, 12 September 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Going Old School: Ranchers, Researchers Convene for USU Ranch Management Academy</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/going-old-school-ranchers-researchers-convene-for-usu-ranch-management-academy</link><description>Just a few days before the official start of fall semester, a group of new students filled seats in a classroom at USU, though with significant experience already under their silver-buckled belts.  The event was the Western Ranch Management Academy, with </description><pubDate>Tuesday, 26 August 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>The world’s largest wildlife overpass will soon span I-25. Here’s how it will help animals – and drivers</title><link>https://www.kunc.org/podcast/inthenoco/2025-08-12/the-worlds-largest-wildlife-overpass-will-soon-span-i-25-heres-how-it-will-help-animals-and-drivers</link><description>The world’s largest wildlife overpass will soon be open for use in Colorado. Wildlife overpasses allow animals to safely cross over highways. And Western states are building more of them to cut down on the number of crashes between vehicles and animals.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 12 August 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Complex Considerations for Urban Wildlife</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/complex-considerations-for-urban-wildlife</link><description>In the heat of the summer, all living things, including plants, people and pets, are looking for relief from the heat in the form of water and food. Because of this, it’s not surprising that wildlife are attracted to our comparatively lush environment. “C</description><pubDate>Friday, 1 August 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Beavers put to work saving two Utah rivers</title><link>https://www.popsci.com/environment/beavers-utah-rivers/</link><description>A relocation project shows how these 'ecosystem engineers' are quietly transforming dry landscapes.</description><pubDate>Saturday, 19 July 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Beavers put to work saving two Utah rivers</title><link>https://www.popsci.com/environment/beavers-utah-rivers/</link><description>A relocation project shows how these 'ecosystem engineers' are quietly transforming dry landscapes.</description><pubDate>Saturday, 19 July 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>A Bear Lake namesake returned recently. Then it was struck and killed.</title><link>https://www.sltrib.com/news/2025/06/04/bear-lake-namesake-returned/</link><description>Black bears once nearly wiped out are returning to the northern lake. There haven't been many encounters with black bears — animals once so common the lake was originally called “Black Bear Lake,” before trapping nearly erased them from the area by the ea</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 4 June 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Increased tourism tightens pressure on Bear Lake ecosystems and communities</title><link>https://www.upr.org/utah-news/2024-05-29/increased-tourism-pressure-bear-lake-ecosystems-communities</link><description>Utah State University professors and graduate students presented the preliminary results of a six-month research study on the impacts of increased tourism at Bear Lake on ecosystems and communities at Garden City Hall. The study conducted by USU’s College</description><pubDate>Thursday, 29 May 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>PREVENTING WILDFIRES WITH HIGH HEAT AND A LITTLE BIOMASS</title><link>https://atmos.earth/climate-solutions/preventing-wildfires-with-high-heat-and-a-little-biomass/</link><description>Darren McAvoy remembers helping to clear wood debris as a student forester and wildland firefighter in his early 20s, standing atop a massive heap of branches and brush left behind from an effort to thin the forest and reduce fire hazards.</description><pubDate>Monday, 12 May 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Bears in the 'Burbs? Why More People Are Having Close Encounters.</title><link>https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/life/a64409830/bears-in-the-burbs/</link><description>Many people across the United States, especially in forested areas, are encountering more black bears more often. The bears are sauntering into their backyards, garages, even kitchens. The bears aren’t there to attack humans — they're there to haul down b</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 7 May 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>USU professors are the first to fight bird window collisions with ultraviolet light</title><link>https://www.upr.org/utah-news/2025-04-25/usu-professors-are-the-first-to-fight-bird-window-collisions-with-ultraviolet-light</link><description>If you’ve ever stayed at Utah State University’s on-campus inn, you may have noticed: It’s a death trap for birds. Two Utah State University professors wanted to change this.</description><pubDate>Friday, 25 April 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>How climate change affects animal migration</title><link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/features/6-minute-english_2025/ep-250424</link><description>Climate change can affect the way animals migrate, but did you know that some animal migration could be used to fight climate change? Neil and Beth discuss this with Dr. Trisha Atwood and teach you some new vocabulary along the way.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 24 April 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>From pocket gophers to skunks: Southern Utah's backyard animals are 'not necessarily a problem'</title><link>https://www.stgeorgeutah.com/news/from-pocket-gophers-to-skunks-southern-utahs-backyard-animals-are-not-necessarily-a-problem/article_9d0dafbe-8f49-40cf-89c8-9e77b1e06688.html</link><description>In spring, many of Southern Utah's wildlife species become more active, looking for food, shelter and partners, and sometimes finding themselves in someone's backyard. But that's "not necessarily a problem." Utah State University Extension Professor Nicki</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 23 April 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Fishing removes key nutrients from marine ecosystems</title><link>https://www.earth.com/news/fishing-removes-key-nutrients-from-marine-ecosystems/</link><description>Industrial fishing has been a huge food source for decades. It pulls enormous amounts of marine organisms – and their stored nutrients – out of the water every year. Scientists say these activities are tied to the loss of important nutrients that help kee</description><pubDate>Thursday, 17 April 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Oldest living Colorado blue spruce finds a home in Utah</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/oldest-living-colorado-blue-spruce-finds-a-home-in-utah/</link><description>Standing just outside Cedar City at Cedar Breaks National Monument, “Old Blue,” a nickname from its discoverers, is estimated to be 457 years old. Old Blue appeared to be “hiding among Engelmann spruce,” according to an academic article by Lutz with fello</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 16 April 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>As Utah’s San Rafael River dries, scientists try to give native fish a fighting chance</title><link>https://www.kuer.org/science-environment/2025-04-14/as-utahs-san-rafael-river-dries-scientists-try-to-give-native-fish-a-fighting-chance</link><description>The San Rafael River has a problem. As it winds through red rock country northwest of Canyonlands National Park, it increasingly runs dry.  Drought is again taking hold across Utah, and that could spell trouble for the wildlife that rely on the river, suc</description><pubDate>Monday, 14 April 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>USU Recognizes 2025 Faculty Award Winners</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/usu-recognizes-2025-faculty-award-winners</link><description>The Office of Research and the Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President hosted the 2025 Faculty Awards Ceremony on Wednesday. This event recognized the research, service and teaching efforts of Utah State University faculty.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 27 March 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah ecologists confirm that the 'Beehive State' lives up to its name</title><link>https://phys.org/news/2025-03-utah-ecologists-beehive-state.html</link><description>As pollinators for native plants and food crops, bees play a pivotal role in our ecosystem, according to Utah State University ecologist Joseph Wilson. He and undergraduate researcher Anthony Hunsaker took on the herculean task of documenting Utah's bee s</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 25 March 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>New wildfire institute takes aim at growing fire crisis</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/new-wildfire-institute-takes-aim-at-growing-fire-crisis/</link><description>If Utah needs to sidestep a major, deadly fire, Utah State University will play a crucial role. The Utah Forest Restoration Institute, housed in USU’s S.J. &amp; Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources, was launched using state funding in 2024 to synth</description><pubDate>Monday, 17 March 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Bogs sink carbon dioxide 'like no ecosystem on Earth,' but many are at risk of being drained</title><link>https://www.stlpr.org/2025-02-17/bogs-sink-carbon-dioxide-under-threat</link><description>Peat bogs sequester a massive amount of the Earth's carbon dioxide. But even as scientists work to better understand bogs' sequestration, the wetlands are under threat.</description><pubDate>Monday, 17 March 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Where There’s Death, There’s Life: The Ecological Impacts of Megacarcasses</title><link>https://voicesforbiodiversity.org/articles/circle-of-life-megacarcasses</link><description>It turns out there is surprisingly little evidence for life after death. I mean this specifically in the ecological sense. Think “the circle of life” from The Lion King in Mufasa’s lecture to Simba: “When we die, our bodies become the grass, and the antel</description><pubDate>Monday, 10 March 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Houndsmen &amp; Lions w/ Dr. Julie Young</title><link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27qOcc9SW14</link><description>In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Julie Young, a wildlife biologist and professor at Utah State University, to discuss the complex world of mountain lion research, hunting, and conservation. With recent changes in hunting regulations and growing debat</description><pubDate>Friday, 21 February 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Deadly encounter: Mountain lion attacks spark controversy</title><link>https://www.popsci.com/environment/deadly-encounter-mountain-lion-attacks-spark-controversy/</link><description>A mountain lion attack that killed a young California man last year has reignited a debate over how the big cats should be managed.</description><pubDate>Sunday, 16 February 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Proposed federal legislation would create Wildfire Research Institute at Utah State</title><link>https://www.cachevalleydaily.com/news/proposed-federal-legislation-would-create-wildfire-research-institute-at-utah-state/article_a78687f2-e8c3-11ef-803d-7bca9fff646b.html</link><description>To help combat the threat of wildfires in Utah, the state's delegation to the 119th Congress has joined forces to introduced the Utah Wildfire Research Institute Act. That proposed federal legislation would create a center for research into essential fore</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 12 February 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Larissa Yocom Named Executive Director of Utah Forest Restoration Institute</title><link>https://www.usu.edu/today/story/larissa-yocom-named-executive-director-of-utah-forest-restoration-institute</link><description>The Quinney College of Natural Resources has named Larissa Yocom executive director of the new Utah Forest Restoration Institute (UFRI), a recently established institute focused on improving forest health and reducing wildfire risk across the state.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 22 January 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>FOUR USU EASTERN FACULTY EARN ANNUAL AWARDS</title><link>https://www.castlecountryradio.com/2025/01/17/four-usu-eastern-faculty-earn-annual-awards/?utm_source=chatgpt.com</link><description>Four faculty from Utah State University Eastern received annual awards from their respective departments and/or colleges recently. Rachel Turner, Hannah Lewis, Katherine Vela, and Sunshine Brosi, joined other USU faculty in being honored for their commitm</description><pubDate>Friday, 17 January 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Northern California study aims to protect livestock from mountain lions</title><link>https://www.cbsnews.com/sacramento/news/nothern-california-study-protect-livestock-mountain-lions/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR1FgtyCqyV0xu10rVJjhwKUdJf4pV_2GubaLTiNf4BW0EOdVN5mDKoOXFI_aem_fi7UHj1pl2LNcJ4u_De4vw#8ghz4adr35hr2pnzx2p4tdjyqfqn17p18</link><description>Mountain lion concerns continue in Placer County, forcing one man to sell off his herd following a recent attack on his sheep. But a new study aims to give ranchers like him some hope. </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 15 January 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>Mountain lion attacks are rising. How can we mitigate the risk?</title><link>https://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2025/01/08/mountain-lion-attacks</link><description>Mountain lion attacks are rare in California, but incidents have been increasing and the cats' behavior has been changing in the past few decades, according to on-the-ground accounts.</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 8 January 2025</pubDate></item><item><title>A Mountain Lion Attacked My Nephews. What Could Have Stopped It?</title><link>https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/31/magazine/mountain-lion-attack.html</link><description>As dangerous encounters in California continue to rise, local residents and wildlife experts are trying to figure out how humans and big cats can coexist.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 31 December 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Mountain lion deterrents to be studied in foothill region</title><link>https://www.mtdemocrat.com/news/mountain-lion-deterrents-to-be-studied-in-foothill-region/article_06477684-c16e-11ef-9ebe-bfbb899847e0.html</link><description>A study of the efficacy of different nonlethal mountain lion deterrents is set to start in January, and local livestock owners are asked to get involved.</description><pubDate>Friday, 27 December 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>'They're getting annihilated': Momentum gathers for ongoing funding for wildlife crossing</title><link>https://www.ksl.com/article/51217796/theyre-getting-annihilated-momentum-gathers-for-ongoing-funding-for-wildlife-crossing?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR2aNwvxB_hhjVLaJzeUuFRvzK0HMgOMO8VTAsmrnqJwWKHU7bhnqTCmmx4_aem_1ihOqU8HIHYYAD3OVcWdSw</link><description>Collisions with large animals cost taxpayers $130 million annually, highlighting the need for solutions. Wildlife crossings are gaining support for potentially ongoing funding in Utah's upcoming legislative session. Bipartisan support seeks a permanent fu</description><pubDate>Thursday, 26 December 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Bear crazy: DNR study seeks answers to human-bear conflict</title><link>https://glenarborsun.com/bear-crazy-dnr-study-seeks-answers-to-human-bear-conflict/</link><description>With so many reports of bear sightings in northern Michigan—the Michigan Department of Natural Resources estimates there are 2,000 black bears living here, with more than 10,000 in the Upper Peninsula. What’s more, we humans are finding it increasingly ch</description><pubDate>Monday, 16 December 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Washington range-riding programs lauded in report</title><link>https://www.capitalpress.com/ag_sectors/livestock/washington-range-riding-programs-lauded-in-report/article_00148ea6-b998-11ef-9222-1ff5cf861805.html</link><description>A study led praises two range-rider programs in northeast Washington, finding the programs are likely helping to reduce the number of conflicts between wolves and livestock.</description><pubDate>Friday, 13 December 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>This is a big fish story</title><link>https://www.deseret.com/lifestyle/2024/12/10/utah-wildlife-resources-stock-lakes-fish-climate-change/</link><description>Stocking fish in Utah waterbodies dates back to 1871 when fish were transported from other states by train and were dropped into lakes along the route. In 1897, Utah opened its first hatcheries and started raising trout locally.</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 10 December 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Predation, not fear of wolves, keeps elk from denuding Yellowstone</title><link>https://www.science.org/content/article/predation-not-fear-wolves-keeps-elk-denuding-yellowstone</link><description>In 1995, officials began to reintroduce wolves to northern Yellowstone National Park, restoring a symbol of wilderness and seemingly triggering an ecological transformation. Elk had been overrunning the park, because most of their predators had been hunte</description><pubDate>Tuesday, 26 November 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah could see a grizzly bear in the future, here's what experts say</title><link>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFy6fSvSL-A</link><description>There are no grizzly bears in Utah, but state biologists say it might not be out of the question in future years.</description><pubDate>Monday, 25 November 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Exploring Eastern Utah: USU Eastern Speaker Series, ‘From the Book Cliffs to Blanding’</title><link>https://usustatesman.com/exploring-eastern-utah-usu-eastern-speaker-series-from-the-book-cliffs-to-blanding/</link><description>USU Eastern is presenting speakers to discuss the unique history and environment of Eastern Utah. “From the Book Cliffs to Blanding: A Panoramic View of Eastern Utah” is a series of six faculty speakers found and introduced by the College of Humanities an</description><pubDate>Monday, 25 November 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>USU researcher tracks African elephant bones to solve one of their weirdest behaviors</title><link>https://www.upr.org/utah-news/2024-11-20/a-usu-researcher-in-the-south-africa-tracks-elephant-bones-to-understand</link><description>Elephants in South Africa repeatedly visit the carcasses of other elephants, and move the bones around. A team of researchers at Kruger National Park are working to illumine this mysterious behavior and understand the role of mega-carcasses on the ecosyst</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 20 November 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Get away grizzly: why scientists are chasing bears with drones</title><link>https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/nov/16/bear-hazing-drones</link><description>Wildlife experts in US west have found small aircraft are ideal for protecting humans and livestock from predators.</description><pubDate>Saturday, 16 November 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>The world’s largest organism is also one of its oldest – and it’s at risk</title><link>https://geographical.co.uk/science-environment/pando-world-largest-living-organism</link><description>Pando, a single quaking aspen in Utah covering 43 hectares, could be between 16,000 and 81,000 years old. New threats mean the world’s largest tree is now in decline.</description><pubDate>Thursday, 14 November 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Studying the ocean deep at 4,500 feet? It's happening at landlocked Utah State</title><link>https://www.ksl.com/article/51185608</link><description>Utah State University Dean Linda Nagel and Loveland Living Planet Aquarium founder and CEO Brent Anderson sign a partnership between the two organizations in Draper on Oct. 25.. USU students can now earn a marine science minor that is already drawing broa</description><pubDate>Saturday, 9 November 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Understanding Threats to Old Growth Ponderosa Pines</title><link>https://sciencemoab.org/understanding-threats-to-old-growth-ponderosa-pines/</link><description>Ray Mesa, near the La Sal mountains on the Colorado-Utah border is notable for its old-growth Ponderosa pines (estimated to be several hundred years old) that are growing in cool drainages amongst pinyon-juniper woodlands. Recent Ponderosa tree mortality </description><pubDate>Tuesday, 15 October 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah State University researchers describe and identify 11 new wasp species</title><link>https://www.upr.org/science/2024-09-04/utah-state-university-researchers-describe-and-identify-11-new-wasp-species</link><description>“The collection consists of around a million specimens of just these ichneumonid wasps. So just this one family of wasps. And in it there’s, it's really hard to say exact figures, but there's probably something like 10 to 20,000 undescribed species just s</description><pubDate>Wednesday, 4 September 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Utah State University researchers describe and identify 11 new wasp species</title><link>https://www.upr.org/science/2024-09-04/utah-state-university-researchers-describe-and-identify-11-new-wasp-species</link><description>There are more undescribed species within a single family of wasps than all fish, reptiles, birds, and mammals combined. And that’s just one family of wasps. The collection consists of around a million specimens of just these ichneumonid wasps, and in it </description><pubDate>Wednesday, 4 September 2024</pubDate></item><item><title>Unbridled Impact: The Wicked Predicament of Wild Horses on Public Lands</title><link>https://utahstatemagazine.usu.edu/environment/unbridled-impact-the-wicked-predicament-of-wild-horses-on-public-lands/</link><description>With ballooning populations, wild horses and burros are teetering on the edge of crisis.</description><pubDate>Friday, 15 September 2023</pubDate></item></channel></rss>