Not exact matches
Peter Wrege and
colleagues at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, used listening devices similar to those designed to eavesdrop on whales to monitor the sounds and seismic activity of oil prospecting in the Loango
National Park in Gabon.
To explore the difference in copying accuracy, Roel Schaaper of the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in Research Triangle
Park, North Carolina, and
colleagues at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw modified versions of the Escherichia coli bacteria's circular genome.
Eben Paxton of the U.S. Geological Survey Pacific Islands Ecosystems Research Center
at Hawaii Volcanoes
National Park and
colleagues looked
at population trends for seven species of native forest birds living on Kauai's Alakai Plateau, the eroded crater of a long - extinct volcano.
After a day of collecting some very promising data, Mather and
colleagues and were so excited that they set off the following day
at dawn to the
national park — the official access point to Masaya — only to be robbed
at gun - point in the car
park.
Harmon and his
colleagues worked in forest plots — some created as early as the 1930s —
at the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest east of Eugene and Mount Rainier
National Park.
Paul Manger
at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, and his
colleagues monitored sleep in elephants in northern Botswana's Chobe
National Park.
Catherine Crockford
at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and her
colleagues monitored two rival groups of chimpanzees in the Taï
National Park in Ivory Coast between October 2013 and May 2015, collecting chimp urine samples after various forms of interaction.
To conduct the research, Elise Huchard, a zoologist
at the
National Center for Scientific Research in Montpellier, France, and
colleagues examined a group of chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) living in Tsaobis Nature
Park in Namibia over a 9 - year period.