Demographics data helps predict NY flood insurance claims

News

“Are we taxing America so that people with second homes on the water don’t have to pay as much?” asked Brian Rahm, director of the New York State Water Resources Institute in Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Rahm is a co...
  • Development
  • Applied Economics
  • Behavior
  • Water
A house being built in the winter

New Cooperative Extension program connects Cornell to SWNY farmers

News

The five-county region of Allegany, Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Erie, and Steuben Counties relies on an estimated $601 million in agricultural product sales to fuel the local economy. Eighty percent of those dollars come from the dairy, livestock...
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
  • Agriculture
Josh using testing instrument in cattle field

Two CALS students selected as 2020 Cargill Global Scholars

News

Green is majoring in Animal Science, and Miller is majoring in International Agriculture and Rural Development. The Cargill Global Scholars Program is a distinctive international scholarship initiative that began in 2013, and it offers a...
  • Animal Science
  • Global Development Section
  • Agriculture
  • Global Development
a screenshot of a zoom meeting with 12 participants

Global Development experts explore hunger, COVID-19 in journal Nature

News

As COVID-19 disrupts food systems around the world, a pivot to more agile and inclusive data collection and analysis is critical to avert widespread hunger, according to Cornell Global Development experts in a comment piece published Aug. 5 in...
  • Global Development Section
  • Agriculture
  • Food
  • Global Development
Wheat growing in a field

Report fosters ag industry climate-change tracking

News

Art DeGaetano, professor of earth and atmospheric sciences, is one of nine scientists who have co-authored a report to help the nation’s farmers, producers and commercial agricultural managers reduce risk in the face of climate change. “We...
  • Cornell Atkinson
  • Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
  • Agriculture
  • Climate Change
a person sitting in a tractor in a field with the sun setting behind him

Baltimore, Bullock’s orioles will retain separate identities

News

In one corner: the Bullock’s oriole, found in the western half of North America. In the other corner: the Baltimore oriole, from the eastern half. Where their ranges meet in the Great Plains, the two mix freely and produce apparently healthy...
  • Lab of Ornithology
  • Genetics
  • Animals
A yellow and black bird sitting on a tree branch

Benjamin Houlton named as the next Ronald P. Lynch Dean of CALS

News

Houlton’s five-year appointment, effective Oct. 1, has been approved by the Executive Committee of the Cornell University Board of Trustees and is pending ratification by the State University of New York Board of Trustees. He also has been...
  • Global Development Section
  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Climate Change
an aerial shot of the CALS ag quad

Lee Teng-hui, Ph.D. ’68, former Taiwan president, dies at 97

News

After earning a Cornell doctoral degree in agricultural economics at age 45, Lee returned to Taiwan, where he was appointed to a number of governmental positions, including the mayor of Taipei (1978-81) and the provincial governor of Taiwan...
  • Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
  • Agriculture
  • Applied Economics
A man standing at a podium and talking

Panel: Pandemic has exposed long-standing health inequities

News

“For those of us living in black and brown bodies … it’s not unprecedented, it’s business as usual, unfortunately,” said Rachel Hardeman, associate professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health. “Like other epidemics...
  • Department of Communication
  • Health + Nutrition
  • Behavior
Four women on a conference call

McNair Scholars lobby DC virtually for more higher ed funding

News

With a major in biology and society, she had planned to live on campus in student housing to continue her research on the effect of the nutrient choline on children’s cognitive development. This kind of research can make or break a student’s...
  • Biology
Four people on a video conference call

New soil models may ease atmospheric CO2, climate change

News

In an article published July 27 in Nature Geoscience, Cornell’s Johannes Lehmann and others wrote that scientists should develop new models that more accurately reflect the carbon-storage processes beneath our feet, in order to effectively draw...
  • Cornell Atkinson
  • Global Development Section
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Soil and Crop Sciences Section
  • Global Development
  • Soil
  • Environment
  • Planet
  • Climate Change
a green plant growing out of brown soil

Plant communication project gets $1.3M grant from NSF

News

Scientists know that some mRNA – which carries genetic code to a living organism’s protein-making machinery – are making the journey from root to shoot. But they don’t know which of the thousands of strands are purposely trying to share genetic...
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Plant Biology Section
  • Agriculture
  • Plants
  • Crops
  • Biology
  • Genetics
A woman bends over rows of potted seedlings

Small-farm tech reduces deforestation, climate change

News

Small farms in Zambia that use the latest hybrid seed for maize, along with improving health on neutral soils, help reduce deforestation and tackle climate change, Cornell researchers report this month in Global Environmental Change. “Scientists...
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Soil and Crop Sciences Section
  • Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
  • Agriculture
  • Food
  • Global Development
  • Plants
  • Applied Economics
  • Environment
Miombo woodlands near the Lower Zambezi National Park, Zambia

McLaughlin begins second stint as Dyson interim dean

News

For the second time in four years, Edward McLaughlin, the Robert G. Tobin Professor Emeritus of Marketing, has taken the reins as interim David J. Nolan Dean of the Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management. A Dyson faculty...
  • Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
  • Applied Economics
Edward McLaughlin

Bio control experiments aim to balance biodiversity

Multimedia

News

CCE Educators Sharon Bachman and Laura Bailey are partnering with Carrie Brown-Lima, director of the New York Invasive Species Research Institute, to control the invasive plant using biocontrol measures. In this episode, "Extension Out Loud"...
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
  • Environment
People erecting biocontrol tents in wooded area

NYS sanitizer, Cornell’s U-pick guide boost farm success

News

“After months of enduring lockdowns, especially in New York, the pick-your-own berry farms around the state are booming this year,” said Marvin Pritts, professor of horticulture in the School of Integrative Plant Science, in the College of...
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Horticulture Section
  • Fruits
  • Health + Nutrition
A large pump bottle of hand sanitizer on a table next to green cardboard blueberry boxes

Study identifies spread of bee disease via flowers

News

The study, published July 20 in Nature Ecology and Evolution, also found that one in eight individual bees had at least one parasite. The study was conducted in field sites in upstate New York, where the researchers screened 2,624 flowers from...
  • Entomology
  • Pollinators
  • Environment
  • Nature
  • Plants
  • Pathology
Bees on a flower