Thursday, April 6 @11:10 am
Workshop / Seminar
Online - Veterinary and Biomedical Research Building
Upcoming neuroscience seminars this spring on the WSU Pullman campus
April 7 at 12:20 PM Valentina Damonte. “Uncovering key underlying molecular players in a stress-sensitive brain circuit involved in reinstatement” April 14 at 12:10 PM Leah Mayo, University of Calgary. “The endocannabinoid system as a novel…
Friday, April 7 @12:20 pm
Workshop / Seminar
Online - Veterinary and Biomedical Research Building
Upcoming neuroscience seminars this spring on the WSU Pullman campus
April 14 at 12:10 PM Leah Mayo, University of Calgary. “The endocannabinoid system as a novel therapeutic target for trauma-related disorders” April 21 at 12:10 PM Jingru Sun, WSU Spokane. “Neuronal GPCR regulation of innate immunity…
Friday, April 14 @12:10 pm
Workshop / Seminar
Online - Veterinary and Biomedical Research Building
More upcoming neuroscience seminars this spring on the WSU Pullman campus.
April 21 at 12:10 PM Jingru Sun, WSU Spokane. “Neuronal GPCR regulation of innate immunity in C. elegans” April 28 at 12:10 PM Charles Chung, Oregon
Saturday, April 15 @11 am
WSU Pullman
Molecular Plant Science Graduate Student Organization presents Plant Science Day. A free event for hands on plant science activities. Join us to build gingerbread plant cells, extract DNA from strawberries, and make living jewelry to spread the joy of plant life.
Friday, April 21 @12:10 pm
Workshop / Seminar
Online - Veterinary and Biomedical Research Building
Upcoming neuroscience seminars this spring on the WSU Pullman campus
April 28 at 12:10 PM Charles Chung, Oregon
Friday, April 28 @12:10 pm
Workshop / Seminar
Online - Veterinary and Biomedical Research Building
Watch for neuroscience seminars this fall on the WSU Pullman campus
Saturday, April 29 @12 pm
Social
Pullman, City of - Off Campus
Few species are as iconic as Pacific salmon. When considering their importance as a food source, their popularity as a recreational fishery, and they ways our natural systems rely on the immense nutrients deposited by their carcasses after spawning, it’s easy to see why their declines resonate across regions and latitudes. For certain First Nations peoples, including those on whose homelands many of us here in the Palouse reside, these declines are deeply felt.