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UBC
Faculty of Science
UBC SCIENCE CONNECT

News and Events for
UBC Science Alumni | Issue 1, 2017

1.5 degrees could make big difference for our oceans

If countries meet the Paris Agreement warming target of 1.5 degrees Celsius, global fish catches could increase by six million metric tons per year. The benefits would most impact vulnerable tropical areas, UBC researchers say.

2016
Our greatest hits from 2016

We know you are pressed for time, so we’ve made this short video which explains some of our discoveries and achievements over the past year. And remember to follow us on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Flickr.

Indigenous people rely heavily on marine resources

Coastal Indigenous people eat on average 15 times more seafood per person than non-Indigenous people. The UBC research highlights the importance of cultural identity issues when discussing fisheries policy.

What does the world look like to a hummingbird?

New research shows a key area of a hummingbird's brain processes visual signals in an unexpected way. This alternative processing could explain how the birds stabilize themselves while hovering.

Events

Big Data, Big Issues

Should we edit our genes? What if we’ve found the last antibiotic? Discover the issues in big data and genomics.
February 15, 2017

Science and Innovation in BC: What’s On Your Agenda?

What are the key innovation opportunities and challenges facing BC?
February 21, 2017

 

Grahame Arnould: Turning Heads

The biodiversity and environmental art of editorial cartoonist Grahame Arnould.
Until April 2, 2017

 

A beary interesting career choice

Nicholas Pilfold’s (BSc 2007 Life Science) passion is studying bears and traveling to distant places, which he does thanks to his work at the San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservation Research. Pilfold’s research focuses on polar bears, but he is headed to China next month to look at another caniform: giant pandas.

Nominations for 2017 UBC awards close soon

The next UBC Alumni Achievement Awards recipients won’t raise their own hands. That’s why we need you. Help us recognize UBC alumni who are advancing their ambitions for a better world. Deadline for nominations is January 27, 2017.

Kudos

Oceanographer Daniel Pauly was awarded the 2016 Albert Ier Grand Medal (Science) by the Musée Océanographique.

Fisheries expert Rashid Sumaila has been appointed as a Hokkaido University Ambassador.

Mary O’Connor has won the IRPE Prize, which honors a young ecologist.

Michelle Kunimoto completed her undergrad at UBC and discovered four new exoplanets last year, and now makes Forbes's 30 Under 30. She's currently pursuing her Master's degree at UBC.

Elusive microbe finally caught

Scientists have captured Diplonemids, a single-celled organism found in the ocean, for the first time, and now realize the protists come in a wide range of shapes and sizes.

“It’s like discovering lions after having only seen gazelles, antelopes and zebras for so many years,” said UBC botanist Patrick Keeling.

UBC team in running for $20-million carbon prize

A team led by UBC mineralogist Lee Groat is hoping to combine two common mining by-products—acidic drainage and carbon dioxide emissions—into stable, storable pellets. This technology could prevent accidents such as the tailings pond breach at Mount Polley and nab the team the $20-million NRG Cosia Carbon XPrize.

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