Robert M. Goodman – School of Environmental and Biological Health Sciences
Rutgers Center for Vector Biology
Archives for May 2018
Your dinner might be swimming North thanks to climate change, Rutgers study says
Malin Pinsky – Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources
Warming Waters Push Fish To Cooler Climes, Out Of Some Fishermen’s Reach
Malin Pinsky – Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources
Exotic tick species spreads to Middlesex County
Robert Goodman – School of Environmental and Biological Sciences
New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station; Rutgers Center for Vector Biology
2018 SEBS Convocation Remarks by Outgoing Dean of Academic Programs Rick Ludescher
EDITOR’S NOTE: Rick Ludescher, dean of academic programs, has served as Master of Ceremonies of the SEBS Convocation since 2012. Following a one-year sabbatical, Rick will return to full-time teaching as a professor in the Department of Food Science, where he began as an assistant professor in 1988. This is my last Convocation as […]
Peggy Policastro (GSNB’93,’15) Receives the 2018 Rutgers University Supervisor of the Year Award
Supervisor: n.- a person who oversees a person or activity. Although this may formally explain Peggy Policastro’s role as director of the IFNH Student Ambassador program, it only brushes the surface of what she really does. This past spring during National Student Employment Week, Peggy Policastro, nutritionist for Rutgers Dining Services and the director of […]
Climate Change Will Force Hundreds of Marine Species to Move
James Morley – Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources
Hundreds of fish species will be forced to shift north due to climate change, study says
Malin Pinsky – Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources
Why Do Some Fruits and Vegetables Conduct Electricity?
Paul Takhistov – Department of Food Science
East Asian invasive tick has now been found in third N.J. county
Robert Goodman – School of Environmental and Biological Sciences
The New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station; Center for Vector Biology