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wfubiology.bsky.social
WFU Biology
@wfubiology.bsky.social
The Wake Forest University Department of Biology is committed to cutting-edge #research and scientific #education!
https://linktr.ee/wfubiology
We're happy to have you join us, Dr. Krieg!! Welcome to @wfubiology.bsky.social at @wakeforest.bsky.social 💛🎩
🚨 I’m thrilled to share that I am starting as an Assistant Professor at Wake Forest University this Fall!
👀 Opportunities coming soon as I re-root my research program in plant ecophysiology and evolution at Wake 🌿 🌲🌱
#NewPI #plantecophys #botany @wfubiology.bsky.social
@wakeforest.bsky.social
July 1, 2025 at 7:23 PM
Congratulations, Graduates! 💛🎩 #Classof2025
2024/25 Ph.D. Graduates (Sarah Nichols and Ellen Weinheimer) and M.S. Graduates (Olutosin 'Samuel' Olusola, Lara Rudman, and Isaac Sowah Badu) in @wfubiology.bsky.social @wakeforest.bsky.social
Congratulations, #WFU25 #WFUGrad!
June 3, 2025 at 6:53 PM
Congratulations to the Class of #WFU25! 🥳🎩 @wfubiology.bsky.social @wakeforest.bsky.social #WFUGrad 🎩🌹
May 20, 2025 at 12:04 AM
Happy Administrative Professionals Day/Week!
🌹🌸 Thank you, Mrs. Cindy Davis & Ms. @carajdavis.bsky.social, for everything you both do to support our department! 🌷🌺
April 25, 2025 at 7:13 PM
Happy Earth Day! 🌏 How do you plan to celebrate today?
Follow @wakeforest.bsky.social Sustainability & #WFUEarthMonth 🐦
April 22, 2025 at 7:59 PM
On Mon., March 31, 2025, at 4p in Worrell 1312, Dr. Paul J. Laurienti, Wake Forest University School of Medicine Professor of Radiology, will give a seminar talk “Neuroscience, Society, & Me.”
March 26, 2025 at 1:07 PM
Reposted by WFU Biology
Tropical rainforests play a vital role in global climate regulation and biodiversity conservation. WFU researchers who monitor a network of forest plots stretching from the slopes of the Andes to the lowlands along the Amazon River in Southern Peru have contributed to a major new study.
Tropical forests are struggling to keep pace with climate change | Wake Forest News
Tropical rainforests play a vital role in global climate regulation and biodiversity conservation. Wake Forest University researchers who monitor a network of forest plots stretching from the slopes o...
news.wfu.edu
March 7, 2025 at 9:27 PM
On Mon, March 17, at 4p in Winston 126, Dr. Ken Kishida, Wake Forest University School of Medicine Professor of Translational Neuroscience, will give a seminar “Neuroscience of Consciousness, Choice, & Computation (NC3): What’s dopamine got to do with it (i.e., Neuroscience & Society)?… Everything!”
March 12, 2025 at 4:03 PM
Reposted by WFU Biology
Awesome opportunity with @wfubiology.bsky.social at @wakeforest.bsky.social and the Section on Infectious Diseases to learn about Field Epidemiology and Tropical Medicine with Lima and Tumbes, Peru this summer! Contact medewitt@wakehealth.edu #idsky #medsky

studyabroad.wfu.edu/program/wfu-...
WFU/Peru: International Field Epidemiology and Tropical Medicine (Summer) - Study Abroad
studyabroad.wfu.edu
January 10, 2025 at 2:33 PM
@wfubiology.bsky.social faculty, staff, and graduate students enjoyed a wonderful holiday luncheon today at the Graylyn Estate. It was filled with beautiful decorations, a delicious menu, and wonderful people. 🎩💛 Happy Holidays! 💛🎩
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📷: @carajdavis.bsky.social
December 17, 2024 at 12:51 AM
Happy Holidays from @wfubiology.bsky.social! 💛🎩❄️🎁🎀 We look forward to seeing you all in the New Year!
December 16, 2024 at 9:03 PM
Reposted by WFU Biology
Senior Jo Cai, a double major in biology and psychology and her mentor Joost Maier, a translational neuroscience professor in the Wake Forest School of Medicine used flavor perception in rats as a model system to gain fundamental insights into how the brain processes multisensory information.
November 25, 2024 at 5:51 PM
A new study, co-authored by @wakeforest.bsky.social Dr. Sheri Floge, Assistant Professor of @wfubiology.bsky.social, brings together viral ecologists, chemists and physicists to find out more about marine microbes and what happens when viruses infect them. #WFU #WomenInStem
When marine algae get sick: how viruses shape microbe interactions | Wake Forest News
By looking at the tiniest virus-infected microbes in the ocean, researchers are gaining new insights about the marine food web that may help improve future climate change predictions. The new study, c...
news.wfu.edu
November 23, 2024 at 5:11 PM