Living Labs: How Experimental Forests Offer Insights into Small Mammal Population Dynamics
UNH study reveals how small mammals adapt reproduction to forest seed cycles, influencing seed dispersal, tree regeneration, and forest ecosystem resilience.
UNH study reveals how small mammals adapt reproduction to forest seed cycles, influencing seed dispersal, tree regeneration, and forest ecosystem resilience.
Nada AlHaddad and Noé Lugaz, research professors who study, the solar phenomena that can result in northern lights, answer questions about this phenomenon.
UNH research helps dairy farmers improve colostrum quality with data-driven insights on timing, environment, and nutrition to boost calf health and herd productivity.
UNH scientists study antifreeze proteins to improve cryopreservation methods, aiming to revolutionize medicine, agriculture, and biotechnology with ice-binding solutions.
UNH scientists innovate manure-powered systems to heat greenhouses, extending growing seasons for small farms while boosting sustainability and reducing emissions.
New Year’s eve is in the rearview mirror but those resolutions are front and center and if you’re already struggling to keep them that is perfectly normal. Katie Godshall, a clinical assistant professor in the College of Health and Human Services at the Âé¶¹app and an expert in the field of mental health, reminds that change can be hard and before throwing in the towel it’s important to remember why those resolutions were important in the first place.
Caleb Marrero ’25 is an aspiring physical therapist who has visions of opening a private PT practice where he can specialize in treating athletes and contribute to his field via research. In UNH’s McNair Scholars program, he found the ideal platform to help get him there.
The UNH Center for the Humanities is proud to be supporting the innovative work of three College of Liberal Arts (COLA)Ìýfaculty members this academic year. Amy Michael (anthropology) has just completed her semester-long leave advancing a research project that focuses on community memory in response to long-term missing persons cases in rural spaces. This project pilots two nested studies exploring how forensic anthropologists’ work can be relevant to living persons affected by unresolved disappearances.
Researchers from the Âé¶¹app have published a groundbreaking study in Physics Letters B, a leading journal in nuclear physics. Led by postdoctoral researcher David Ruth and co-authored by UNH professor Karl Slifer and others, provides new insights into the hyperfine splitting effect, which governs how electrons interact with atomic nuclei.
UNH researchers have harnessed artificial intelligence to produce and label the largest-ever database of aurora imagesÌý — about 700 million total — that could lead to better prediction of potentially harmful geomagnetic storms.