Undergraduate Highlight

  • Rachel Wildrick
    I became interested in the EBIO major because it covered so many interesting and engaging areas of study, like animal behavior, genetics, speciation and evolution, and allows for diverse interests. Also, the EBIO major requirements can be easily
  • Mimi Lai
    Hello, My name is Mimi Lai. I joined the EBIO department because I enjoy taking EBIO classes. As a nature enthusiast and animal lover, this major offers a great range of courses that keeps me in touch with the field. After taking Genetics with Dr.
  • Matthew Ross
    In my ecosystem science research, I was able to work in Wyoming, Hawaii, and do my own project in Utah. I love the mix of field-studies working outside and lab experiments inside. For my thesis, I studied the effects of fire mitigation efforts on
  • Lindsey Dougherty
    After learning to SCUBA dive, I knew I wanted to pursue a career in biology. The EBIO department at CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ gives a well-rounded background for any biological field and has a very strong ancillary science program. My future plans are to pursue a
  • Ariel Demarest with butterflies
    The great thing about the CU EBIO department is that undergraduates are actually encouraged to do research. Not only are the faculty incredibly supportive, CU funds undergraduate work. Last summer, I got a UROP grant from the university to conduct
  • Anna Walker next to tree
    I am in my senior year as an undergraduate in the EBIO department. I have immensely enjoyed every EBIO class I have taken not only because the material is always so interesting, but also because the people in the department, students and professors
  • As an undergrad studying ecology and evolutionary biology, Lizzie Lombardi found herself as one of the few β€œplant” people on a team of ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ engineering students who were tasked with a lofty mission: build a robotic system
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