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News

Is it possible to tackle malnutrition one child at a time? The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that nearly 870 million people of the 7.1 billion people in the world–or one in eight–were suffering from chronic...

A man kneels on a boat on the water while holding a very large fish

News

Those concerned about the sustainability of their seafood have a handy new resource, developed with the help of Patrick J. Sullivan, associate professor of quantitative population and community dynamics in the Department of Natural Resources...
  • Biological Field Station
A group of people stand outside a greenhouse

News

On Sept. 4, New York State Assembly members Barbara Lifton (D-125), Samuel Roberts (D-128), Al Stirpe (D-127) and Addie Russell (D-116) were welcomed to CALS for a special sustainable agriculture research tour. After taking in Stocking Hall...

News

Horticulture professor David Wolfe has spent the past 25 years studying the ecological impacts of a changing climate. But his investigations have also led him down a different path—one at the intersection of evolution and psychology. At a Sept...

News

On Saturday, August 30, Dan Krall, associate professor of landscape architecture, led a volunteer clean-up of the historic Ithaca City Cemetery. The 220-year-old, 16-acre municipal cemetery is located just down the hill from West Campus and is...

Two men work in the laboratory

News

Instead of spending her summer swimming, working, or hanging out with friends, 16-year-old Julia Deutsch was busy learning how to enhance iron availability in foods and improve nutrition in developing countries. Deutsch, a rising junior at Byram...

News

When we think about where our food comes from, we often picture farmers on tractors, sweet-faced dairy cows, and well-tended fields of crops shining in the summer sun. But many bountiful and nutritionally rich sources of food exist in the wild...

News

The new scourge of North American forests is proving a sweet treat for some birds. Scientists scouring data from the Lab of Ornithology’s citizen science project, Project FeederWatch, have discovered that four species of native insectivorous...

News

Congratulations to the Cornell Local Roads Program, which was recently awarded a 2013 Roadway Safety Award by the U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration and the Roadway Safety Foundation. The National Roadway Safety...

News

Orientation week at Cornell officially kicks-off today with Move-In Day, as new students converge on campus with family and friends to settle into their homes for the coming academic year. For CALS freshman and transfer students, the next week...

Juneberries (they look like blueberries) on a bush

News

If a new research effort beginning at Cornell’s Willsboro Research Farm is successful, the juneberry, a Canadian cousin of the eastern serviceberry, may soon find a new home among the commercial berry patches of New York State. One of the...

News

Being a small- to medium-scale dairy farmer in New York State just got a little bit easier, thanks to the recent announcement of $1 million dollars in new state funding for a program designed to help the state’s dairy farmers reduce energy costs...

News

Congratulations to Food Science and Technology alumnus August Deimel, M.P.S. ’11, winemaker at Keuka Springs Vineyards. The winery’s 2012 Riesling was awarded the Governor’s Cup as best New York wine at yesterday’s New York Wine & Food Classic...

A piece of farming equipment moves through a field

News

It may weigh more than three tons, but the new research combine in use on the farms of the Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station (CUAES) is a model of precision and flexibility. Tailor-made for research, the combine will help...
Wild parsnip growing in the field

News

Wild parsnip ( Pastinaca sativa) is not to be confused with the pale root vegetable Mom forced you to eat when you were small. Although the two plants are both a part of the Apiaceae (or Umbelliferae) family – including carrot, celery, parsley...

News

Yup, it’s that magical time of the year again: SHARK WEEK on the Discovery Channel, when we can enjoy the awe of the fascinating creatures from the comfort and safety of our own homes. Although there are no great whites, makos or even spiny...

News

The garden may seem an unusual venue for a lesson in geometry, but Buffalo high school math teacher Elizabeth Kent has found it is a useful way to integrate math formulas and hands-on learning, by designing garden layouts and building raised...

News

Wow! Mother Jones, Monsanto, and Cornell are all on the same page regarding the benefits of the Eastern Broccoli Project! As Thomas Björkman, associate professor of horticulture, recently explained to the notoriously left-leaning magazine...

A group of people sit together outside

News

They may work on opposite sides of the world, but Cornell doctoral candidates Morgan Ruelle and Michelle Baumflek have both learned that indigenous knowledge is key to preserving cultural and natural resources. Ruelle (pictured above, far left...

News

“Roots need oxygen to breathe, just like we need oxygen to breathe.” These words of wisdom from Neil Mattson, an associate professor in the department of horticulture. He recently shared some pointers with Good Housekeeping Magazine, for a...