Washington master gardeners today: Nine ways WSU Master Gardeners make healthier communities
WSU Extension Master Gardeners use decades of accumulated training and knowledge to help build healthy communities.
WSU Extension Master Gardeners use decades of accumulated training and knowledge to help build healthy communities.
TACOMA, Wash.—Aiming to catch and identify invasive pests and diseases before they impact Washington farms and forests, scientists at Washington State University will plant trees and shrubs as sentinels at the Port of Tacoma. Funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service’s Office of International Programs and drawing on the involvement of community scientists, […]
Drier summers and warmer autumns spell trouble for that iconic winter evergreen, the Christmas tree. A WSU scientist is working to safeguard the crop.
The Adopt-A-Drain program, launched by Puget Sound communities and supported by the Washington Stormwater Center, celebrates first anniversary Oct. 1.
John Stark, a WSU professor of ecotoxicology and director of the Washington Stormwater Center at the WSU Puyallup Research and Extension Center, has been named an Entomological Society of America fellow.
Outstanding researchers, teachers, and team members to be honored at annual Faculty and Staff Awards.
Stephanie Blair draws on science, and the knowledge and connection with her Native American community.
Plant Pathologist Gary Chastagner studies promising varieties to solve a deadly disease challenge
Todd Murray has been named the Norman Ehmann Endowed Chair in Urban Pest Management, where he’ll do research and educate the urban pest management industry in the Pacific Northwest.
WSU Extension is working with the Port of Tacoma and the WSDA to eradicate the invasive Mediterranean vineyard snail using steam.