Bill Ripple featured in 1859 Oregon's Magazine
The Ripple Effect, a story about the second warning to humanity, is featured in the January/February issue of 1859 Oregon's Magazine.
The Ripple Effect, a story about the second warning to humanity, is featured in the January/February issue of 1859 Oregon's Magazine.
Oregon State University researchers William Ripple and Christopher Wolf, both part of the Global Trophic Cascades Program of the Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society, are among the paper’s 18 co-authors.
The Oregon State University Faculty Senate and Associated Students of Oregon State University passed a joint resolution last month endorsing “World Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice,” an article published late last year by lead author Oregon State Professor William Ripple.
On Tuesday, June 12, Bill Ripple will present "What Wolves can tell us about the World's Health: How the Yellowstone Experiment Led to the Second Warning to Humanity" at Worthy Brewing in Bend, OR.
Independent, Mar. 7, 2018: A dire warning to the world about its future, which predicts catastrophe for humanity, is continuing to gain momentum.
EurekAlert!, Mar. 7, 2018: Twenty-five years after the first 'scientists' warning to humanity', a new report is continuing to gain momentum and is already the one of the most talked about papers globally since Altmetric records began.
Albany Democrat-Herald, Feb. 13, 2018: Bill Ripple, a distinguished professor of ecology at Oregon State University, has spent a large part of his career studying the interplay between predators, prey and plant life in and around Yellowstone National Park.
CNN, Nov. 15, 2017: Environmental scientist William Ripple and his colleagues decided to create a new letter that has also struck a nerve. Since it was published in the journal BioScience on Monday, hundreds more scientists have signed on to the letter.
Boston Globe, Nov. 13, 2017: Of the more than 15,000 scientists who signed a letter Monday warning people about the environmental threats the Earth faces, about 70 of them were professors, researchers, or PhD candidates at Massachusetts universities.
Washington Post, Nov. 13, 2017