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A team of five graduate students was awarded first place in the annual Better Philadelphia Challenge for their proposal to improve food security in Pennsylvania’s Delaware River Valley over the next century. Landscape architecture students Li-Yu...
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Located just below Libe Slope and home to more than 1,000 transfer and upper class undergraduate students, the five residence halls of the West Campus House System offer a living-learning community for students—and the resident faculty who...
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In high school classrooms around the United States, a kit developed at Cornell and brought to market by the Center for Technology Licensing (CTL) is introducing students to the science of biofuels. Developed by Corinne Rutzke, M.S. ’98, Ph.D....
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By Alex Koeberle ’13 New York farmers foraging for alfalfa varieties have three new, robust options. Developed by professor of plant breeding Donald Viands; senior research associate Julie Hansen ’80, M.S. ’88, Ph.D. ’89; and research support...
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By Anne Ju Bolstered by a $2.3 million venture capital investment, an agricultural technology startup has moved on from its first home in Cornell’s life sciences business incubator, a little more than a year after it arrived. Agronomic...
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Conventional wisdom holds that re-localizing food systems is not only good for urban consumers hungry for ripe tomatoes and crispy apples, but it also benefits rural communities through greater profits for farmers. A team led by Todd Schmit, an...
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Since 2013, millions of sea stars native to the Pacific coast of North America from Baja California to southern Alaska have succumbed to a mysterious wasting disease in which their limbs pull away from their bodies and their organs exude through...
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Susan Brown became an associate dean in CALS and the Goichman Family Director of the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station (NYSAES) on Jan. 2. Brown had served as associate director of NYSAES since July 1, 2013. Among her...
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Just as the invention of nonstick pans was a boon for chefs, a new type of nanoscale topography that repels bacteria holds promise for any surface where microbes are unwelcome guests—including food processing equipment, medical equipment and...
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A Cornell-U.S. government research team is poised to transform the shape of trees and orchards to come, thanks to a $1.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation Plant Genome Research Program. The project, led by Kenong Xu, assistant...
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Imagine a daily pill that can help control diabetes using the body’s own insulin. John March, associate professor of biological and environmental engineering, and collaborators have achieved this feat in rats using an engineered probiotic. Their...
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Think tofu but with a creepy-crawly, sustainable twist: A Cornell food science team has developed a new protein product—C-fu, made entirely of crushed mealworms—which may help feed the world’s booming population, a projected 9 billion people by...
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What is the best way to conserve biodiversity in Ecuador’s Andes Mountains? Start with the bears. A Cornell research team is joining efforts with local partners in Ecuador to help design a socio-ecological corridor that could help save...
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As I look ahead to my second term as dean of Cornell University’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, I also find myself reflecting upon the college’s recent accomplishments. In June 2014, we launched the School of Integrative Plant...
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