A new analysis of GPS tracking data from 37 animal species, paired with cellphone location data from across the United States ...
University of Kansas researcher Folashade Agusto trained as an applied mathematician, though today she's an associate professor of ecology & evolutionary biology. She uses that mathematical training ...
Scientists tracked people and wildlife during COVID-19 and discovered new ways humans and animals may coexist.
A new study shows that wildlife reacts not only to roads and cities, but also to the daily presence of humans.
Up to two-thirds of species are changing their behavioral patterns in response to seeing people in their natural environment.
Dark-eyed juncos are small sparrows found throughout North America. Rhododendrites via Wikimedia Commons under CC BY-SA 4.0 In the spring of 2020, when humans were largely hunkered down at home amid ...
Lockdowns. Social distancing. Shuttered schools and businesses. The COVID-19 pandemic and its sweeping disruptions set off a stampede of "what it's doing to us" research, focused largely on ...
Folashade Agusto employed computer modeling and large datasets to better understand how COVID-19 was transmitted in one community in South Africa during the worldwide pandemic. LAWRENCE — University ...
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