
A $9.1 million research project will help ensure the sustainability of freshwater fish stocks in Canada for generations to come.
A $9.1 million research project will help ensure the sustainability of freshwater fish stocks in Canada for generations to come.
When the Royal Ontario Museum needs to learn more about a 500-million–year-old fossil, it turns to UWindsor’s Sharon Lackie.
UWindsor professor Catherine Febria has been named the Canada Research Chair in Freshwater Restoration Ecology.
Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research professor Catherine Febria will open the 2019 GLIER Seminar Series on Friday, Sept. 13.
Eight students from Yunnan University in China travelled to Windsor for a two-week course at the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research.
What do the Detroit River, Toronto Harbour and New York’s Buffalo River all have in common?
These waterways were once among the 10 most polluted in the Great Lakes. Now they boast magnificent waterfronts and restored habitat for fish and wildlife. They are the pride of their communities, drawing residents and tourists alike.
Scientists from UWindsor’s Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research fanned out across western Lake Erie Wednesday as part of a binational project to assess the danger posed by this summer’s algal bloom.
A UWindsor research project that will help ensure the sustainability of freshwater fish stocks in Canada for generations to come has received $9.1 million in funding.
Daniel Heath, an integrated biology professor at UWindsor’s Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, is heading a genome project that involves Canadian researchers from coast to coast.
UWindsor researchers are installing high-tech equipment along the Detroit River shoreline to monitor water levels and wave action.
Real-time monitoring equipment deployed in Lake Erie will establish drivers of algal blooms.