UC-led report identifies Cincinnati’s climate indicators
January 28, 2022
UC partners with Cincinnati leaders and community members to identify climate issues in the city.
January 28, 2022
UC partners with Cincinnati leaders and community members to identify climate issues in the city.
February 1, 2022
UC faculty member authors report on Cincinnati's climate equity factors.
May 4, 2022
Biologists at the University of Cincinnati are studying low-cost ways to improve water quality and wildlife habitat in Greater Cincinnati’s creeks. UC biologists Stephen Matter and Michael Booth are examining whether water quality and wildlife habitat can be improved simply by adding logs and branches in select parts of the upper Cooper Creek. The addition of fallen timber could help slow periodic floodwaters, create more standing pools for fish during droughts and add nutrients for plants and fungus that support other aquatic life, researchers said.
June 29, 2022
UC Alumni Sylvana Ross is saving bees and headed to Cornell University under fellowship where she will start her PhD program in entomology. She is a co-founder of the Queen City Pollinators Project.
December 21, 2023
A University of Cincinnati biologist is working with teachers at two Cincinnati public schools to help them explain evolution using frogs that biologist Lucinda Lawson studies in Africa. Lawson works with Hyperolius frogs, a genus of 150 to 200 colorful species, including one she and her research partners discovered in 2019 that was new to science.
June 21, 2022
Whiting grant supports UC pilot program at CPS that couples science with the humanities.
September 29, 2022
New research from UC shows that poor metabolic health parameters are linked to low breast milk production. The study was published in the journal Breastfeeding Medicine.
July 21, 2023
New research by Wendy Calaway shows that half of arrests lead to dismissals, not convictions, but defendants still wait behind bars until the case is decided. Calaway is a practicing attorney and assistant professor of criminal justice at the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash College.
October 17, 2022
Treatments for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) — a type of high blood pressure that affects arteries in the lungs and in the heart — have improved significantly over the past 15 to 20 years and researchers at the University of Cincinnati have been at the forefront of those improvements. The result of a series of studies UC researchers were part of have allowed new medications to come to market for patients with PAH.