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Follow-up funding for microbial fight against parasitic weed in Africa
Can micro-organisms in the soil help the fight against parasitic weeds in Africa? That question launched Promise six years ago. After promising initial results, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has now awarded follow-up funding to the project. -
Microbiële hulp tegen Afrikaanse plaagplant krijgt grote vervolgsubsidie
Kunnen micro-organismen in de bodem hulp bieden bij de bestrijding? Dat was de hamvraag van het Promise-onderzoek dat zes jaar geleden startte. De resultaten zijn zo veelbelovend, dat de Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation nu een vervolgsubsidie toegekend heeft van ruim 10 miljoen dollar. -
Plants provide power
Need a place to recharge your phone? Our roof features 25 m2 of energy-producing green! -
Highlights
A few highlights of the NIOO-KNAW building. -
A living, breathing building
As sustainable as possible, in as many respects as possible: that was the imperative when the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW) commissioned a new building. And we have done it! -
Planten geven stroom!
Mobieltje leeg? Op ons hoofdgebouw is 25 m2 elektriciteitsproducerend groen dak aangelegd. -
Highlights
Een aantal highlights van het NIOO-KNAW gebouw. -
Nature research and society
NIOO has a vigorous and long-standing commitment to societal impact. Not only is NIOO housed in a sustainable building designed to translate our ecological principles in terms of architecture and construction, we also have a number of units that are tailor-made for disseminating our ecological knowledge to specific target groups, we have a very active outreach policy, and we actively involve citizens in our research through large-scale citizen-science projects. -
History of NIOO-KNAW
NIOO-KNAW was created in 1992 by merging three important ecological research institutes of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW). Discover our history. -
Large herbivores can bend the curve of biodiversity loss in tropical forests
A 10-year experiment in Brazil’s endangered Atlantic Forest, led by NIOO-researcher Nacho Villar, has found that there's less biodiversity loss in areas where large herbivores can roam free.