Six projects receive Innovative Teaching and Learning Awards

News

A faculty committee assembled by the Center for Teaching Innovation (CTI) granted funding for six projects for 2019. The awards program, in its second year, aims to support faculty – with grants ranging from $5,000 to $25,000 – in exploring new...
  • Microbiology
  • Neurobiology and Behavior
  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
  • Landscape Architecture
  • Biology
A female student wearing virtual reality goggles while other students look on

Plants use a common ‘language’ for emergency alerts

News

But what if plants themselves could “talk” to each other? That’s a question that André Kessler, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, and his research team addressed over a 12-year study that examined plant-to-plant communication in...
  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Environment
  • Plants
A yellow flower that is spread out along the stem of a plant with green leaves at the bottom

Go ‘Wild at Cornell’ with artist, plant stylist Hilton Carter

News

The talk, Oct. 9 at 7:30 p.m. in Statler Auditorium, is free and open to the public. Carter believes bringing greenery into one’s living space has many positive benefits, creating a space that blurs the line between indoors and outdoors, and...
  • Cornell Botanic Gardens
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Plants

Two dozen Engaged Faculty Fellows announced

News

The 2019-20 cohort, the largest in the seven-year history of the program, joins more than 50 other faculty fellows dedicated to advancing community-engaged learning at Cornell and within their respective fields. “I’m delighted to welcome these...
  • Lab of Ornithology
  • Department of Communication
  • Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
  • Landscape Architecture
  • Natural Resources and the Environment Section
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Horticulture Section
  • Development Sociology
An older woman with grey hair sitting at a table with other adults, speaking with them and gesturing.

Study illuminates link between anglerfish & bacteria

News

Scientists who study these fish are still mostly in the dark about the bacteria, which share a symbiotic relationship with the fish, but a new Cornell-led study reveals that the fish most likely acquired the luminous bacteria from the water. At...
  • Microbiology
  • Animals
  • Bacteria
  • Fish
Two anglerfish with sharp teeth and lures coming out from their foreheads

Visa concerns deter foreign-born Ph.D.s from working in startups

News

Foreign-born Ph.D. graduates with science and engineering degrees from American universities apply to and receive offers for technology startup jobs at the same rate as U.S. citizens, but are only half as likely to actually work at fledgling...
  • Faculty
  • Industry
  • Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
  • Applied Economics
  • Behavior
Infographic showing percentage of Ph.D.s. at U.S. startups

‘Migrations’ is theme of Cornell’s first Global Grand Challenge

News

“The unprecedented pace, scale and complexity of movement on our planet – of humans, plants, animals, cultural messages and artifacts, resources, pathogens and more – present a diverse suite of challenges and opportunities that play out across...
  • Lab of Ornithology
  • Natural Resources and the Environment Section
A line of women, men and children walking through tall grass. Some adults are holding children and others are holding baskets.

Head of Ag and Markets hailed as Friend of Extension

News

Hailing Ball’s “tireless passion” and “ubiquitous presence” in support of agriculture and extension work around the state, CCE Director Chris Watkins and Arlene Wilson, president of the New York chapter of Epsilon Sigma Phi, the national...
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
Two white older men and a white older woman standing next to one another smiling for the camera. The middle man is holding a wooden plaque

NIH grants food scientists $2.6M to battle bacteria

News

“Bacteriophages are the naturally evolved predators that fight against bacteria, and they may be an important factor in defeating antibiotic-resistant bacteria,” said Sam Nugen ’99, Ph.D. ’08, associate professor of food and biosystems...
  • Food Science
  • Bacteria
  • Microbial biology
  • Food
Red spider-like creatures with a long body sticking up from the bottom and a large ball on top sitting on a red surface with smaller, dark red balls attaching themselves to the larger balls

Rural Humanities Showcase touts Cornell-community projects

News

The nine projects represented Cornell faculty engagement, teaching and research around “rural humanities” – using the tools of the humanities to address both the rural-urban divide and the realities of rural America, particularly in central and...
  • Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
  • Development Sociology
  • Development
An older white woman standing at the front of the room in front of a screen, leaning on a podium talking to a room full of sitting people.

AI helps shrink Amazon dams’ greenhouse gas emissions

News

With hundreds of hydropower dams currently proposed for the Amazon basin – an ecologically sensitive area covering more than a third of South America – predicting their greenhouse emissions in advance could be critical for the region, and the...
  • Cornell Atkinson
  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Energy
  • Environment
  • Water
a large long cement structure in the middle of a body of water with waves crashing around it

Agronomist Thomas W. Scott dies at 89

News

Scott joined the Department of Agronomy (now the Section of Soil and Crop Sciences in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences’ School of Integrative Plant Science) in 1959 as an assistant professor of soil science with responsibilities in...
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Soil and Crop Sciences Section

Professor delivers sustainability report to UN secretary-general

News

This report supplements annual reviews done internally at the U.N. by giving an independent and broad-based assessment of the current trends in global development and to review how the world can chart a better future. Guterres will present the...
  • Cornell Atkinson
  • Development Sociology
  • Environment
  • Climate Change
A large group of men and women smiling at the camera. One woman and two men in the middle all handing each other a book.

Raptor Program students debate Eagles vs. Falcons on NBC

News

Falcons, while not nearly as big or strong, are the world’s fastest animal. A peregrine falcon can fly upward of 240 miles per hour. It also has a notched, hooked beak it uses to break the back of its prey. So which would you take? That question...
  • Animal Science
  • Animals
A bird with brown feathers standing on a wooden pole

CCE podcast helps navigate industrial hemp issues

Multimedia

News

But with hemp markets, products and output rapidly expanding, growers and producers are facing new challenges. Helping navigate these issues is the Cornell Hemp Team, an interdisciplinary team of Cornell researchers and Cornell Cooperative...
  • Cornell AgriTech
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Horticulture Section
A man bending over green, healthy plants and touching them

Cornell to lead soil health conversation at Empire Farm Days

News

“The good news is, a growing network of innovative farmers, agricultural professionals and researchers are working daily to implement and promote practices that build soil health across the state,” said Joseph Amsili, Cornell Cooperative...
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
  • Soil and Crop Sciences Section
  • Soil
A man stands outside and conducts a demonstration using plants

Cornell CALS co-hosts event to foster rural workforce development

News

To better understand and address these complex issues, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Rural Development Agency is conducting listening sessions across the country to brainstorm more effective ways to keep rural areas vibrant...
  • Development
A white male standing at a podium speaking and gesturing

‘Corpse flower’ poised to make another big stink

News

“The flowering is brief – just a day or two – and difficult to predict,” said Paul Cooper, the Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station greenhouse grower who cares for the Titan arums and more than 600 other species of plants in the...
  • Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Planet
A woman standing on a step stool bending over into a tall, green flower to smell it

LEAD New York founder James Preston ’50 dies

News

Preston was born Oct. 14, 1926, in Friendship, New York, and grew up in farming communities across the state, developing a lifelong interest in agriculture and rural community development. He graduated from Ithaca High School in 1944 and...
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension

Former head of Nintendo is Dyson Leader in Residence

News

Fils-Aimé, who graduated with a degree in applied economics, will participate in a number of events and share leadership lessons and principles he has developed over his career. In his role this academic year, he will visit campus once per...
  • Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management
  • Applied Economics