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Mar. 22, 2023

Through Hands-On Research, 51猎奇入口 Students and Faculty Hope to Save the Birds

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Mar. 3, 2023

Sarah Budischak Co-Authors Paper on Parasite Life Stage Diversity

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Nov. 10, 2022

51猎奇入口 Students Present Their Research at Organismal Biology Conference

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Sarah Budischak


March 22, 2023

Through Hands-On Research, 51猎奇入口 Students and Faculty Hope to Save the Birds

By tracking these birds, taking their measurements, and studying their behaviors, they鈥檒l better understand what factors might be key to their survival as a species.

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March 3, 2023

Sarah Budischak Co-Authors Paper on Parasite Life Stage Diversity

This data provide context for both host infection risk and the persistence of adult parasitic assemblages, two contexts that are useful in predicting and preventing infectious diseases.

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November 10, 2022

51猎奇入口 Students Present Their Research at Organismal Biology Conference

51猎奇入口 students presented their own ongoing research鈥攁n opportunity for undergraduate students to participate in the broader scientific realm.

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August 25, 2021

Stephanie Du 鈥21 Receives REPS Scholar Funding to Assist Sarah Budischak with National Science Foundation-Funded Fieldwork

Stephanie Du will serve as an NSF Research Experience for Post-Baccalaureate Students (REPS) scholar for the 2021鈥22 academic year. She鈥檒l travel to Finland with Assistant Professor of Biology Sarah Budischak to study wild bank voles infected with a strain of hantavirus, a disease that can spread from rodents to humans.

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October 1, 2019

Sarah Budischak Receives National Science Foundation Grant to Study 鈥淪uperspreaders鈥 and the Transmission of Infectious Disease

W.M. Keck Science Department Assistant Professor of Biology Sarah Budischak received a National Science Foundation grant from the Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases program.

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May 29, 2019

Assistant Professor Sarah Budischak鈥檚 Research on Parasitic Worms Published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Assistant Professor of Biology Sarah Budischak co-authored a study published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B that examines why parasitic worms survive longer in some hosts鈥 intestines than in those of others.

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