Laboratory Content / Laboratory Content for ٺƵ en Catalyzing Change: Engineering Enzymes to Meet Human Needs /student-researcher/news/catalyzing-change-engineering-enzymes-meet-human-needs Enzyme engineering is key to the future of human health. The Design2Data program teaches students to solve problems in the food, energy and health industries. October 01, 2024 - 9:05am Jocelyn C Anderson /student-researcher/news/catalyzing-change-engineering-enzymes-meet-human-needs Tiny Shells Indicate Big Changes to Global Carbon Cycle /news/tiny-shells-indicate-big-changes-global-carbon-cycle <p>Experiments with tiny, shelled organisms in the ocean suggest big changes to the global carbon cycle are underway, according to a study from the University of California, Davis.&nbsp;</p> <p>For <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-01530-9">the study, published in the journal <em>Scientific Reports</em></a>, scientists raised foraminifera — single-celled organisms about the size of a grain of sand — at the <a href="http://bml.ucdavis.edu/">ٺƵ Bodega Marine Laboratory</a> under future, high CO2 conditions.</p> May 25, 2017 - 4:31pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/tiny-shells-indicate-big-changes-global-carbon-cycle Robot Larvae Deployed at Sea /news/robot-larvae-deployed-sea <p>Scientists from the University of California, Davis, are deploying “robot larvae” into the ocean at Bodega Bay, just north of San Francisco.</p> <p>These robots mimic clouds of microscopic marine larvae, such as baby crabs, mussels, clams and rockfish. The data the bots bring back provide some of the first direct confirmation of a decades-old and surprisingly contentious scientific mystery: Where do marine larvae go, how do they get there and back, and what allows them to do this?</p> August 31, 2016 - 4:30pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/robot-larvae-deployed-sea