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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...

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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...

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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...

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“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...

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Norman C. Dondero, professor emeritus of microbiology, has died at the age of 95. A scientist, artist and naturalist, he was born and grew up in Massachusetts, earning a B.S. at the University of Massachusetts in 1941, an M.S. at the University...

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Corals have immune systems? We learned that fun fact and much more in this blog post by ecology and evolutionary biology professor Drew Harvell, who is currently in reefs off the southwest coast of Puerto Rico for three weeks to investigate...

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Michael Gore’s first foray into breeding was on his family farm in Virginia. But the budding scientist wasn’t pollinating peas or crossing carrots; he was poring over pedigrees and assessing blood lines – of horses. He assumed he’d become a...

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The Albany Times-Union recently published this Op Ed from Dean Boor: Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently announced that New York has surpassed California as the top producer of yogurt in the U.S. This is a hard-earned and well-deserved honor, but one...

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The mighty blue whale is the largest and loudest mammal on earth. Yet its voice is getting lost in the chaotic cacophony of sounds generated by human activities, from offshore development and energy exploration to commercial shipping...

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What wine can be found in this enologist’s recycling bin? Recently, it was a Bedell 2009 Merlot, which she described as “complex and very pleasant." However, as Kathy Arnink admits to colleague Chris Gerling in this interview in the Appellation...

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When Norman Borlaug first came to India in 1963, millions of Indians lived from “ship to mouth,” surviving on boatloads of wheat imported from the United States. In the 50 years since, India went from producing less than 10 million tonnes of...

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Recent media reports have generated concern among some New Yorkers that acid whey, a byproduct of yogurt and other dairy processing, presents a hazard to human health and the environment. But for Andrew Novakovic, E. V. Baker Professor of...

Red apples hang from an apple tree

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Apple growers across New York are breathing a sigh of relief this spring after 2012’s unseasonably early thaw and harsh spring frosts devastated apples trees throughout the state and caused a 40% drop in production for the year. But although the...
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Semagn-Asredie Kolech sees a lot of potential in the potato. The doctoral candidate in the field of horticulture shuttles between Ethiopia and Ithaca to examine and research efficient agricultural practices in the shadow of climate change, and...

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Rayna Bell, ecology and evolutionary biology Ph.D. candidate and National Geographic Young Explorer, was recently on the hunt in the jungles of the African island nation of São Tomé and Príncipe for the elusive tadpoles of Leptopelis palmatus...

A man wears a straw hat and stands in an orchard

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Before he became a world-renowned expert in pomology and viticulture, he was a taxi driver in New York City, a trolley coach conductor in San Francisco, and a Neruda translator exploring Latin America from the back of a motorcycle, all of his...

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It boasts thriving organic farming communities, a regional reputation for wine and a dairy industry that claims the highest average milk production per cow in the world. No, it’s not New York state, but Israel, where 15 students recently traveled for an intensive one-week trip.

  • Food Science

News

Have you ever wondered why the grass along Tower Road looked so miserable even though it runs alongside the Plant Sciences building? A group of students from the “Grassing the Urban Eden” class (HORT 4931) recently re-sod ded the side of the...

News

Three Cornell faculty members–all from CALS–were recently elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences: Kenneth Kemphues, professor of genetics and chair of the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics; John Lis, the Barbara...