Undergraduate Highlight
- One doesn’t need to venture deep into the Amazon to see evolutionary biology at work. Rather, I simply look out my living room window. As an aspiring evolutionary biologist, I am interested in what factors are maintaining or degrading the species
- I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the beginning, albeit gloomier and more science lacking, per se, than the present. My college career didn’t start in Colorado, unlike many of my other peers. It began in the art studios of St. Olaf College in
- EBIO senior and EBIO Accelerated Master’s student Austin Nash received a 2020 Astronaut Scholarship from the Astronaut Scholarship Federation. This national scholarship awards undergraduates in STEM fields who have demonstrated excellence in both
- Emily Ogburn transferred to CU Boulder from a local community college in order to study evolutionary biology and with a goal to prove that she “could do anything [she] set [her] “heart and mind to”. Emily worked with
- Shana Williams, a first-generation student, enrolled at CU Boulder with an open option major and the intention of finding what sort of science she was most interested in and what would be the most helpful for her
- Hannah came to study biology at CU Boulder because of her young-found interest in biology and genetics along with the copious opportunities available to her in the EBIO department. Freshman year she was involved in the Smith honors RAP, allowing her
- Honeybees fan their wings to cool down hives when temperatures rise, but a new study suggests older honeybees influence the fanning behavior of younger bees. CU Boulder Today highlights Rachel Kasper, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Student who
- Ani Yahzid is a filmmaker, photographer, musician, and student at the University of Colorado, Boulder, double majoring in Business and EBIO. This June he is attempting an experimental film project, with the aim of influencing more