Researchers head out on a boat to explore ecosystems along the Detroit River.
Researchers head out on a boat to explore ecosystems along the Detroit River.
Mike McKay, executive director of the Great Lake Institute for Environmental Research, is leading a research team using sewage as an early warning system to determine trends in COVID-19 infection rates.
Mike McKay is leading a research team using sewage as an early warning system to determine trends in COVID-19 infection rates.
Duncan Stream is one of the high-altitude glacial tarns sampled by a UWindsor research team in New Zealand.
Sampling remote lakes in New Zealand may help a UWindsor research team develop an early warning system to monitor the health of freshwater systems.
Stormwater retention ponds are the subject of a collaborative study between the University of Windsor and the Ontario Greenhouse Vegetable Growers.
Stormwater retention ponds are the subject of a collaborative study between the University of Windsor and the Ontario Greenhouse Vegetable Growers.
UWindsor professor Hugh MacIsaac accompanies students from China’s Yunnan University on a boat trip to collect water samples from Lake Erie.
Eight students from Yunnan University in China travelled to Windsor for a two-week course at the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research.
Christopher Weisener leads a research project developing an early warning system for water quality by exploring microbes in sediment.
Groundbreaking UWindsor research on detecting microbes in sediment as an early warning system for water quality has received NSERC funding.
Stormwater retention ponds in the Kingsville-Leamington area are the subject of a new environmental study.
Stormwater retention ponds in the Kingsville-Leamington area are the subject of a new environmental study.
In Microbial Life in Extreme Environments: the Good, the Bad and the Ugly, UWindsor professor Christopher Weisener will discuss the underestimated importance of bacteria in a Science Café at Canada South Science City, at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, February 18. The session is designed for the general public, and there is no admission charge.