After graduation, Conley moved to Cornell University to
study plant science.
If an interviewer asks a time waster, you should of course forgive and do your best to provide an interesting answer: «Yes,
I studied plant science.
Not exact matches
Studies show that school gardens have multiple benefits, from teaching students about
plant science and agriculture, to instilling a sense of responsibility.
Scientist Kamal Meattle from Dehli has
studied the
science of growing
plants indoors to create significantly cleaner indoor air.
I'm simply pointing out that there are other
studies and other
science out there that does not support an all
plant based diet as «The way».
Even though the
science says that the amount of lead absorbed by
plants varies widely (spinach and sunflowers = leady, apple trees and tomatoes = not leady), and even though every
study on children who play in the dirt and eat homegrown food (my eight - year - old daughter included) has come back saying that there is no evidence of elevated bodily lead levels, people around here are petrified about growing their own vegetables, and even of letting their kids play in the mud.
In 1969, an outdoor classroom for
science study, The Nature Trail, was
planted by students and teachers on the perimeter of the School's property.
A 2014 report to the UK Council for
Science and Technology, for instance, concluded that «it is not appropriate to have a regulatory framework that is based on the premise that GM crops are more hazardous than crop varieties produced by conventional
plant breeding», citing two decades of extensive
studies that have not revealed significant risks to human, animal or environmental health.
Editor's note (01/05/18): This article has been updated to clarify that the
study by Stephen Long and others published in
Science in 2016 involved improving the efficiency of photosynthesis in tobacco
plants.
And fewer deer could mean more
plants go uneaten, according to Chris Darimont, a professor of conservation
science at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, who was not involved in the
study.
Researchers at the Center for Engineering MechanoBiology (CEMB), an NSF
Science and Technology Center at the University of Pennsylvania,
study plants like this Arabidopsis thaliana to learn how molecules, cells and tissues integrate mechanics within
plant and animal biology, with the aim of creating new materials, biomedical therapies and agricultural technologies.
That
plants like bryophytes influenced the formation of mud deposits long before roots appeared is a surprise, says geobiologist Woodward Fischer of Caltech who wrote a commentary about the
study for the same issue of
Science.
He didn't get into art college, so he pursued his scientific interest in fungi instead,
studying for a bachelor's degree in
plant sciences at the University of Edinburgh, followed by a Ph.D. in mycology.
Speeches came from a variety of speakers, including a
science broadcaster and writer, a Pakistani - born Canadian Muslim who works in STEM, a Pakistani - born professor who
studies cell biology and anatomy; and, an emergency room physician who helped start the process to phase out coal - fueled power
plants by 2030 in Alberta.
Last month, 25 years after that first EPCOT greenhouse boat ride, a full - fledged biologist now (
studying malaria instead of vegetables but oh well), I decided to revisit the
plants that inspired my career in
science.
I came to Spain at the end of 1999 with a short - term grant to
study abroad from the European
Science Foundation's
Plant Adaptation Programme.
The new
study, published online this month in the journal Environmental
Science and Technology, is the first to examine how biochar affects the chemical signaling that's routinely used by soil microorganisms that interact with
plants.
These beautifully preserved 240 - million - year - old pollen grains are evidence that flowering
plants evolved 100 million years earlier than previously thought, according to a new
study in the open - access journal Frontiers in
Plant Science.
Some of the new nuclear
science research programs, including the one at MIT, are
studying new reactor designs and fuel cycles that scientists (and policy - makers) hope will make nuclear
plants safer and cheaper to operate, and produce waste materials with smaller volume, shorter half - lives, and less appeal to terrorists and other would - be nuclear powers.
An international research team reports results of a three - year
study of sediment samples collected offshore from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power
Plant in a new paper published August 18, 2015, in the American Chemical Society's journal, Environmental
Science and Technology.
David Hibbett of Clark University, another of the
study's senior authors, compared the work to a previous collaboration with the DOE JGI detailed in
Science to trace the evolution of white rot fungi, which are capable of breaking down cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin in
plants.
Indeed, the author of a commentary accompanying the
study in
Science called the
plants «tiny, little scrappy things.»
The price would be roughly comparable to that of capturing carbon dioxide at power
plants and storing it underground, which would eventually cost about $ 200 per ton of carbon, according to a recent
study from Harvard University's Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs, compared with about $ 400 per ton of carbon for the forests.
Two recent
studies describe these kinds of mechanisms: one of them, published in the journal Molecular Systems Biology, describes the process through which cells stop growing due cell differentiation; the second one, published in Journal of Cell
Science, describes
plants» cell replenishment after being damaged.
Jonathon Cottone, a UD junior majoring in animal and
plant sciences, is working with rice
plants,
studying ways to help them resist arsenic while also increasing their nutritional value.
Sixty - two scientists from 19 countries spanning six continents
studied the relationships between
plant biomass production and species diversity, culminating in a paper appearing in
Science, the world's leading journal for cutting - edge scientific research.
To
study how violin contours change over time, Dan Chitwood, a
plant biologist and avid viola player at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis, Missouri, analyzed photographs of more than 7000 auctioned violins made between the years of 1560 and
plant biologist and avid viola player at the Donald Danforth
Plant Science Center in St. Louis, Missouri, analyzed photographs of more than 7000 auctioned violins made between the years of 1560 and
Plant Science Center in St. Louis, Missouri, analyzed photographs of more than 7000 auctioned violins made between the years of 1560 and 2003.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Sowing excitement in the
plant science community, the National Science Foundation (NSF) today announced that it will award $ 85 million for studies over the next 5 years aiming to unlock the genetic secrets of corn and other
science community, the National
Science Foundation (NSF) today announced that it will award $ 85 million for studies over the next 5 years aiming to unlock the genetic secrets of corn and other
Science Foundation (NSF) today announced that it will award $ 85 million for
studies over the next 5 years aiming to unlock the genetic secrets of corn and other crops.
At the Umeå
Plant Science Centre, UPSC, Umeå University, the researchers thereafter studied where in the plant the protein was loc
Plant Science Centre, UPSC, Umeå University, the researchers thereafter
studied where in the
plant the protein was loc
plant the protein was located.
The
study's lead author, Dr. Theodore Endreny of the College of Environmental
Science and Forestry (ESF) in Syracuse, New York, said the value of trees» services could easily be doubled by simply
planting more of them.
A recent
study published in the journal
Science found that in a span of 120 years, Illinois lost half its wild bee species, largely because of diminished numbers of wild flowering
plants.
That fast - spreading development is creating additional water stress while simultaneously damaging the ecosystem's ability to absorb carbon dioxide and store or «fix» it in
plants, according to the research — a
study led by scientists at the University of Montana and published in the journal
Science.
The
study, led by Assistant Professor Xu Jian from the Department of Biological Sciences at the NUS Faculty of
Science, was carried out using a small flowering
plant called thale cress, known scientifically as Arabidopsis.
«
Plants, animals, and people all depend on forests and may all face additional challenges as temperatures increase and precipitation patterns shift,» said John Shuey, a co-author of the
study and Director of Conservation
Science for the Indiana Chapter of The Nature Conservancy.
Land
plants and fungi may have arisen far earlier than previously thought, according to a
study published today in the journal
Science.
During panel discussions Sept. 18 at 6, 7 and 8 a.m. PDT (9, 10 and 11 a.m. EDT), scientists and researchers will discuss the various
science and research
studies, including RapidScat, 3 - D printing in Zero - G, technology to measure bone density, and model organism research using rodents, fruit flies and
plants.
The
studies were led by the laboratory of Harsh Bais, associate professor of
plant and soil
sciences in UD's College of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
The new species was discovered as part of a 5 - year, $ 4.36 million
study funded by the National
Science Foundation to inventory all 1500 or so species in the Solanum genus — a diverse group that includes poisonous
plants commonly known as nightshades as well as agriculturally important crops such as tomatoes, potatoes, and eggplants.
At Kumho Life and Environmental
Science Lab in Kwangju, for example, 10 of its 55 workers are paid by the program and work alongside full - time employees to crystallize proteins, breed transgenic
plants, and conduct
studies on environmental stress signals.
The
study has been conducted within the «The artificial leaf» project which is funded by Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation to physicist, chemists, and
plant science researchers at Umeå University.
Brown University ecologist Marc Tatar says the current
study, published in this week's
Science, provides «really profound evidence» that longevity is controlled not by actual resources but rather by hormones that are cued to resources (such as the way
plants sense winter by sunlight changes).
She has degrees in biology,
plant pathology / mycology, and
science writing, and has spent many happy hours
studying life in situ.
NASA will host a prelaunch panel discussion at 8 a.m. PDT Sept. 18, at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, featuring scientists and researchers who will discuss various
science and research
studies, including the four Ames - supported payloads to
study model organism research using yeast, rodents, fruit flies and
plants.
Discovery of the new species was a small part of a five - year, $ 4.36 - million National
Science Foundation - funded
study — led by Bohs — to better classify and create a comprehensive online inventory of all 1,500 species in Solanum, one of Earth's largest genera of flowering
plants.
According to a
study led by the researcher Usue Pérez - López of the Department of
Plant Biology and Ecology of the UPV / EHU's Faculty of
Science and Technology, the colour of the leaves of these vegetables determines the speed at which their compounds act.
The series of steps that
plants use to make lignin has been
studied for decades, said Wout Boerjan, a co-author of the paper who does research in
plant biotechnology at Ghent University and Belgian life
sciences institute VIB.
The team of Luis Lopez - Molina, professor at the Department of Botany and
Plant Biology of UNIGE's Faculty of Science, Switzerland, has been interested for a long time in the mechanisms controlling germination, arguably the most critical decision in the life of a plant: «We have discovered that the genes involved in the synthesis of cutin, a waterproof substance, are important for the maintenance of dormancy in seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana, a small plant widely used as a model organism to study plant bio
Plant Biology of UNIGE's Faculty of
Science, Switzerland, has been interested for a long time in the mechanisms controlling germination, arguably the most critical decision in the life of a
plant: «We have discovered that the genes involved in the synthesis of cutin, a waterproof substance, are important for the maintenance of dormancy in seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana, a small plant widely used as a model organism to study plant bio
plant: «We have discovered that the genes involved in the synthesis of cutin, a waterproof substance, are important for the maintenance of dormancy in seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana, a small
plant widely used as a model organism to study plant bio
plant widely used as a model organism to
study plant bio
plant biology.
American Association for the Advancement of
Science American Association of Anatomists American Association for Dental Research American Association of Immunologists American Astronomical Society American Economic Association American Educational Research Association American Geophysical Union American Institute of Biological Sciences American Mathematical Society American Physiological Society American Society of Agronomy American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology American Society for Engineering Education American Society for Investigative Pathology American Society of Mammalogists American Society of Mechanical Engineers American Society for Microbiology American Society of
Plant Biologists American Sociological Association American Statistical Association Association of American Geographers Association of American Medical Colleges Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities Association for Molecular Pathology Association of Population Centers Association for Women in Mathematics Association for Women in
Science Biophysical Society Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation Consortium of Social
Science Associations Council of Energy Research and Education Leaders Council of Environmental Deans and Directors Crop
Science Society of America Ecological Society of America Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology Genetics Society of America Geological Society of America Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers - USA Mathematical Association of America National Council for
Science and the Environment National Postdoctoral Association Population Association of America Research!America The American Federation for Medical Research The Biomedical Engineering Society The Endocrine Society The Optical Society The Ornithological Council Society for Neuroscience Society for the
Study of Reproduction Soil
Science Society of America SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics
«The ability to identify nicotine and other
plant - based drugs in ancient dental plaque could help us answer longstanding questions about the consumption of intoxicants by ancient humans,» said Shannon Tushingham, a WSU assistant professor of anthropology and co-author of a new
study on the research in Journal of Archaeological
Science Reports.
Random surveys within the accompanying
studies showed physical activity, vegetable preference and knowledge of nutrition and
plant science increased among more than 1,369 third grade students while sugar - sweetened beverage consumption decreased.