Other News

UCF’s ant king featured on national video

Most people cringe when they hear “fire ant,” but University of Central Florida biologist Joshua King is likely to ask where – and head straight to them. King, an entomologist or insect expert, studies the invasive ant species and has found some startling results. While Floridians may spend thousands of dollars trying to eradicate them, [...]

Dr. Hojun Song Awarded NSF CAREER Grant

Hojun Song, an Assistant Professor of Biology at UCF, has received a prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award of $787,000 to support his research in evolutionary biology. Dr. Song’s research focuses on understanding the evolution of locust swarms. Locusts are grasshoppers that can form enormous migrating swarms of biblical proportions. They are major pests [...]

UCF joins statewide institute focused on climate change

Interest in climate change and sea level rise has grown considerably in the past decade. Floridians need reliable scientific information about potential changes so that they can make decisions and policies that are economically beneficial and environmentally sound. This is particularly important given the wide range of opinions and, often conflicting, interpretations of available evidence [...]

Biology student wins research competition

Sara Bolivar Wagers, UCF Biology student, attended the Minority Access’ 13th National Role Models Conference and participated in the Student Research Presentations. Wagers placed third under the Biomedical Research Section and was awarded a $1,000 scholarship. She has received attention and praise from UCF professors for her hard work and dedication. Early this year, Wagers [...]

UCF campus wildlife

College life at UCF wouldn’t be the same without them. “We bought the land to build a university, not a nature preserve,” UCF biology Professor Emeritus Jack Stout says, as he stands before a 4-by-4-foot aerial map of the campus, studying it intently. “But it turned out to be both.” Hurriedly crossing from asphalt parking [...]

cosmarketing

090220NS-Panther2_t607-299x206

A state grant will allow DOT employees and a contractor to more closely monitor the movement of wildlife along a rural stretch of U.S. 41 in Collier County.

The Roadside Animal Detection System, or RADS, was a first for Florida when it was unveiled in January along a 1.3-mile stretch of highway that cuts through Big Cypress National Preserve and has been especially deadly for endangered Florida panthers. Sensors that detect movement of wildlife trigger flashing lights to warn passing motorists.

Now a $450,000, two-year grant will allow the state to more fully move into the monitoring phase of the RADS program starting sometime this month, DOT spokeswoman Debbie Tower said. The grant will send workers from DOT and the contractor into the Everglades to periodically make observations on-site of wildlife movement, collect data from the system’s computer and examine video shot from surveillance cameras, she said.

In addition to this program, researchers from UCF’s Biology department are set to participate in a two-year monitoring study later this summer to see how well RADS is working. UCF Biologist Daniel Smith will be part of the study.

Researchers will survey drivers, look for animal tracks at spots where system logs show it has been triggered and purposely set off the sensors to see whether drivers really slow down, Smith said.

Read more about the state program here.