McGill Students for Wildlife Conservation Symposium

Thursday, March 21, 2024 18:00to20:00

Come hear McGill professors dedicated to wildlife conservation speak about the environment!3630 rue University, Montreal, QC, H3A 0C6, CA/macdonaldCategory: Faculty of Agricultural and...

In Bermuda, the signs of the season are changing

Published: 14 March 2024

White-tailed tropicbirds spend most of the year at sea, out of sight of people. When the seabirds make their annual descent into Bermuda to breed, though, their long, streamer-like tails, snowy...

Elliott receives Principal’s Prize for Outstanding Emerging Researchers

Published: 6 June 2022

Three highly accomplished early career researchers have received a significant McGill distinction: The Principal’s Prize for Outstanding Emerging Researchers....

Kyle Elliott 2017 World Economic Forum New Champion on Global Collaboration in the 4th Industrial Revolution

Published: 17 September 2018

Kyle Elliott (NRS), Canada Research Chair in Arctic Ecology is in Tianjin, China to participate in the Annual Meeting of the New Champions of the World Economic Forum (WEF). In 2017, Kyle was named...

Mercury decline in seabirds due to diet, not emission controls

Published: 24 November 2017

For 47 years, biologists have plucked eggs from seabird nests along the British Columbia coast. Many of the eggs were collected from remote rocky islands surrounded by some of the world’s roughest...

World Economic Forum Young Scientists Class of 2017 celebrates breakthrough talent from across the globe

Published: 11 July 2017

The World Economic Forum announced its 2017 class of 55 Young Scientists, assembling a distinguished cohort of top talent making an impact on research as diverse as quantum and computer science,...

Bacteria control levels of dangerous pollutant in seabirds

Published: 21 December 2016

Despite ongoing global pollution, researchers Kyle Elliott (Natural Resource Sciences) and John Elliott (Environment Canada) have discovered that levels of mercury in seabirds off the coast of B.C....

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