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Central Michigan University's Telehealth Broadband Pilot Program has recently expanded its outreach to other rural counties throughout the state.
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Community members are helping researchers in northeast Michigan collect data on salamander populations.
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Michigan researchers are testing out an "emerging tool," they hope could eradicate an infectious disease spread by deer.
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The five-year, $9.6 million grant from the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health will fund study, called “Genetic Variation in Cancer Risk and Outcomes in African Americans.”
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Entomologists say insects are declining at alarming rates — one major study estimates we’re losing 2% in total insect biomass every year. Now, the National Academy of Sciences is preparing to embark on a study to understand insect trends across North America.
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The "new asbestos" or Sleeping Bear Dunes? A lack of research on community exposure to silica and fugitive dust leaves many communities in the dark about their health risk.
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U.S. Senator Gary Peters came to MSU's Horticultural Center Friday to promote legislation that would fund research to help fruit producers combat an invasive insect species.
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Water quality data for various Michigan streams and lakes is used to make policy and management plans, but a lot of that data actually come from regular people. A state-led program is now looking for more volunteers to help monitor water bodies near them.
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The state is awarding $3.6 million dollars to universities, conservation districts, and nonprofits for their efforts to tackle invasive species.
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Dr. Anthony Chappaz has been awarded close to one million dollars in beamtime from the national government.