Nov 8, 2022
Congratulations to our colleagues in WashU Marketing & Communication! The video “Our world by degrees: In search of refuge” highlights research at Tyson Research Center and at the Missouri Botanical Garden.
ForestGEO Spotlight: Anna Wassel and the Pawpaw Patrol
Trio of publications explain regional mosquito patterns
Liz Carlen's urban squirrel research (video)
Former Tyson undergrad fellow publishes forest spatial biodiversity findings
May 31, 2022
Previously a member of Jonathan Myers’ Forest Biodiversity Team, Jacqueline Reu is first author on research published in the journal Ecology. The study determined that tree beta diversity matters more for ecosystem functioning than other components of biodiversity at larger scales.
Canid conservation program launched
Apr 21, 2022
WashU and the Living Earth Collaborative are part of a new Missouri-based conservation initiative led by the Saint Louis Zoo. Working with the Endangered Wolf Center and Tyson, scientists are looking to answer ecological and health-related questions about canids — red foxes, gray foxes and coyotes — as well as bobcats, which live in close association with canids.
7 years of Tyson forest 'seed rain' contributes to global study
TERAs share Tyson bat research at Owl-o-Ween
Tysonite Stan Strembicki interviewed by STL Public Radio
"Hot topic" article by Tyson humanities fellow published in The Ampersand
Humans of Tyson 2021
Tyson scientists and collaborators publish multi-city investigation of "luxury effect" on wildlife
Aug 18, 2021
In Global Change Biology, recent research from the Urban Wildlife Information Network explores how mammal diversity varies with economic factors and urban intensity. Tyson scientists Solny Adalsteinsson and Beth Biro, and collaborator Whitney Anthonysamy, contributed to this large-scale effort to understand patterns of wildlife species in urban areas.