Âé¶¹app

College of Life Sciences & Agriculture

Recent Stories

  • earth from space
    - Back to the Future
    This image shows a future view of the world in equilibrium at 2,000 parts per million of atmospheric carbon dioxide (current level is 393 ppm). Sea level is higher by some 260... Read More
  • yellow pumpkin named Sunlight
    - The Great (Yellow and White) Pumpkin
    There’s a new pumpkin in the patch and consumers have Brent Loy to thank. A professor of plant biology and genetics, Loy is a plant breeder. During his 45 years doing research at... Read More
  • moose infected by ticks
    - Tick, Tick, Moose
    Up to 100,000 winter ticks can live on a moose, causing severe hair loss and reduced reproductive productivity. Photo courtesy Daniel Bergeron In New Hampshire, the mighty moose... Read More
  • bee
    - The Bees and Dinosaurs Connection
    For the first time ever, scientists have documented a widespread extinction of bees that occurred 65 million years ago, concurrent with the massive event that wiped out land... Read More
  • bobtail squid
    - Creature Feature
    Hawaiian bobtail squid (Euprymna scolopes UNH microbiologists have received a $716,000 to study the evolution of beneficial microbes by examining the relationship between the... Read More
  • vikki rodgers
    - Schooled Here, Alum Wins Teaching Excellence Prize at Babson College
    Vikki Rodgers studying how plants respond to climate change at the Boston Area Climate Experiment in Waltham, MA. (Photo credit: Webb Chapel). As an undergraduate studying biology... Read More
  • students on ireland study abroad trip
    - The Luck of the Irish Scholars
    The Associate Dean of Academic Affairs for the College of Life Sciences (COLSA) at the Âé¶¹app (UNH), Kim Babbitt, is no stranger to student requests that she... Read More
  • betty sideman
    - Moving Right Along
    Becky Sideman, a vegetable and berry specialist with UNH Cooperative Extension, will use cutting edge technology to assist with crop research and classroom teaching. Read More
  • students participating in project smart
    - Smart Students Study Cutting-edge Science with Project Smart
    In the crowded atrium of Morse Hall, large posters mounted on easels described cutting-edge science ranging from genetically engineered plants to 3-D bio-printing to an ultra-low... Read More
  • MINKE WHALE DISSECTION
    - Land Blubber
    Talk about a whale of a learning experience. Early this month, a long-dead and decomposing 10,000-pound minke whale provided hands-on learning for 10 undergraduates, including... Read More