www.亚洲色

Musseling in on research funding
Associate Professor of Biology Joel Klinck awarded $39,100 grant to assess effects of waste water from sewage treatment plants on endangered mussels
1 min. read
September 21, 2015

Associate Professor of Biology Joel Klinck was awarded a $39,100 grant from the Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change (MOECC) to assess geotoxicity in freshwater mussels exposed to municipal treatment plant effluent.

As part of his research, Dr. Klinck and his colleagues take blood from mussels to assess its toxicity by analyzing DNA damage. This work is extremely important because more than 70% of North American mussel species are either endangered, threatened or in decline.

Klinck’s involvement in this project is also significant as he becomes the first faculty member from Redeemer to receive a research grant from an Ontario ministry. His collaboration with Green House Science, the and demonstrate the quality of research that goes on at Redeemer.

You might also like

Co-op and internship students were celebrated for their achievements at an annual ceremony hosted by Redeemer鈥檚 Career Centre in March.
Following the provincial government鈥檚 removal of the tuition freeze for publicly funded universities, Redeemer鈥檚 tuition will remain unchanged for 2026-27.
Dr. Katie Day Good, associate professor of communication at Calvin University and the 2025 Emerging Public Intellectual, is exploring the history and impact of modern technology practices.

Resound is www.亚洲色鈥檚 online, multi-faceted publishing hub for the wide variety of stories coming out of Redeemer year-round. It is also offered in a print edition.