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Powerhouse plants that bolster the food web

 E-Mail IMAGE: A white-blotched Heterocampa munches on an oak leaf. A new study led by the University of Delaware s Doug Tallamy identifies the most critical plants needed to sustain food webs across. view more  Credit: University of Delaware University of Delaware Professor of Entomology Doug Tallamy published a new research study in Nature that systematically identifies the most critical plants needed to sustain food webs across the United States. Alongside co-authors Kimberley Shropshire and former graduate student Desiree Narango, now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the study drills down to the top plants in each county and bioregion, illuminating a plan for how to restore ecosystems anywhere in the country.

The single biggest foreign policy decision Joe Biden faces

The single biggest foreign policy decision Joe Biden faces Vox.com 12/14/2020 Alex Ward © Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images President-elect Joe Biden speaks during an event to announce new Cabinet nominations on December 11, 2020, in Wilmington, Delaware. When I spoke last week with Gérard Araud, France’s ambassador in Washington from 2014 to 2019, I expected to hear about the world’s reaction to President-elect Joe Biden and his Cabinet. My aim was to understand the decisions global leaders faced and the effects they’d have on the world. But in the course of our conversation, Araud made me realize the most important decision wouldn’t be made in some far-off capital. It’d be made in Washington, DC, almost as soon as Biden walks into the White House.

New community COVID testing site opens at UMass Amherst

New community COVID testing site opens at UMass Amherst Updated Dec 14, 2020; Posted Dec 14, 2020 The UMass Amherst COVID-19 asymptomatic testing center, shown above as it geared up for the fall semester on campus, is now open to all Massachusetts residents. Testing is free but must be made by appointment online. (Hoang Leon Nguyen / The Republican) Facebook Share AMHERST Buoyed by the success of its fall COVID-19 testing program and bolstered by a $5 million state grant, the University of Massachusetts Amherst began expanded asymptomatic testing Monday. On the first morning of testing, a light wintry mix fell as a steady stream of people arrived at the Mullins Center. But there were no lines and no waiting, and plenty of space between visitors. A single staff member posted outside the entrance guided people to the proper doors in contrast to the opening in August for UMass students and staff only, when several workers were on hand to make sure the process went in an o

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