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  • NAU disease ecologist receives $2.25 million grant to study potential biological warfare agent

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NAU disease ecologist receives $2.25 million grant to study potential biological warfare agent

Posted by Heather Tate on September 10, 2018

Dave Wagner pulling samples out of the freezer.

Francisella tularensis is one of the most infectious pathogenic bacteria known to science—so virulent, in fact, that it is considered a serious potential bioterrorist threat. Humans can contract respiratory tularemia—a rare and deadly disease—by inhaling as few as 10 airborne organisms.

Northern Arizona University professor David Wagner, director of the Pathogen and Microbiome Institute’s (PMI) Biodefense and… Read more

Filed Under: College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, The Pathogen and Microbiome Institute

NAU entomologist launches landmark study of the desert darkling beetle

Posted by Heather Tate on June 20, 2018

Aaron Smith discussing beetles with his student

From the blue death-feigning beetle of the American Southwest to the fog-basking beetles found in the Namib Desert of southern Africa, darkling beetles inhabit deserts all over the world. More than 20,000 different species have been identified, but thousands more are still awaiting discovery. And scientists have yet to fully understand their evolutionary history.

With $879,000 in… Read more

Filed Under: College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences

New NAU study of vertebrate genomes, phenomes, populations to predict response to climate change

Posted by Heather Tate on January 7, 2018

Loren Buck showing sample in his lab.Professor Loren Buck, environmental physiologist and associate director of Northern Arizona University’s Center for Bioengineering Innovation (CBI), is leading a new project that has the potential to change nothing less than the way scientists understand life on earth.

Titled “Predicting vertebrate responses to a changing climate: modeling genomes to phenomes to populations (G2P2PoP),” the project is designed to tackle… Read more

Filed Under: Center for Bioengineering Innovation, College of Engineering, Informatics, and Applied Sciences, Merriam-Powell Center for Environmental Research, School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems, The Pathogen and Microbiome Institute

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