Fieldwork photos of Kading lab members, who traveled in May 2021 to biosurveil bats in Uganda.
Top Colorado State University researchers mobilized their disciplines over the course of the past year to address challenges raised by the global coronavirus pandemic.
On International Women’s Day, we celebrate the contributions and impact from women everywhere, including all of the CSU scientists and researchers who have led in the fight against COVID-19
Rebekah Kading recently posted a video of herself playing “Meditation” by French composer Jules Massenet on the violin with the backdrop of Colorado scenery. She hopes people will find her music to be peaceful and relaxing.
How do bats stay healthy while hosting viruses that cause vicious disease in people? The answers could lead to COVID-19 cures.
With a focus on bats, infectious disease researchers including Rebekah Kading are interested in their link to the outbreak of coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2.
The global COVID-19 outbreak is serious but isn’t a cause for panic, a panel of researchers and experts at Colorado State University agreed Wednesday.
Arthropod-borne and Infectious Diseases Laboratory (AIDL) researchers are using new surveillance techniques to understand the spread of infectious diseases.
Researchers at CSU continue to contribute to scientific understanding of all coronaviruses, including SARS and MERS.