Despite these weaknesses and short lives they strive to accomplish much and as a result are the most technologically advanced. They managed to create anti-magic technology during the second era, commonly called The Crimson Age. (Victorian England inspired fashion and architecture) Beastials: The Beastials are the Beast Men of Menias Vera. There are three types of Beastial: Mumohada (Beastials that very closely resemble humans. At most these Beastials will have animal ears, a tail, or eyes), Kemukujara (Beastials that are closer to animals. They may have patterned skin, fur/scales, and will always have a tail and ears), and the Juhi (Beastials that very closely resemble animals walking upright). Their empire is built by several different sentient tribes of Beast Men. The twelve sentient tribes of Beastials are the Muridae, Giraffidae, Felidae, Leporidae, Draco, Squamata, Equidae, Bovidae, Hominidae, Phasianidae, Canidae, and Suidae. There are other Beast-Men tribes but are considered lesser because they are closer to wild beasts.
His current research, carried out in the Kosma and Santos labs at the University, focuses on plant-microbe interactions with an emphasis on reducing food waste and spoilage. Kelly Loria, Ecology PhD student Kelly is a PhD student in the Natural Resources and Environmental Science Program advised by Dr. Joanna Blaszczak. Prior to joining the NRES department, Kelly received a degree in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from the University of Colorado Boulder, where she researched alpine lake ecology with the Niwot Ridge Long Term Ecological Research Program. She is broadly interested in how headwater catchments will be impacted by climate change in areas that are experiencing rapid signals of winter warming like the Sierra Nevada Mountains. She is currently investigating patterns of mountain stream metabolism and nutrient uptake by algal communities and the sensitivity of these trends to expected winter disturbances in Lake Tahoe Basin. William Fredrick Roser, Civil Engineering PhD student William is a PhD student in the Civil and Environmental Engineering program working under Professor Keri Ryan to study interactions between structural and nonstructural building systems.