Opportunities

57
volunteers
61.25
hours
57
Volunteers
1
Hours
UN Sustainable
Development Goal
15
Life on Land
Yooper Wildlife Watch | Citizen Science
9/15/23 - 10/14/23
Cincinnati, OH, USA
57
volunteers
61.25
hours

  • The Upper Peninsula (UP) of Michigan is home to a diverse wildlife community comprised of gray wolf, black bear, fox, fisher, marten, mink, river otter, abundant deer, raccoons, red squirrels, and many other mammals and diverse avian species. Diverse wildlife in the UP are supported by the varied land cover across the region. 

     

    Marquette, MI is the largest urban center in the UP and a popular destination for recreation enthusiasts. Marquette is a vacation destination for tourists year-round. As such, the Marquette urban-wildland interface is an excellent system in which to evaluate how seasonal variation in human recreation activities influences wildlife spatial and temporal activity patterns.

     

    Yooper Wildlife Watch goals include:

     


    • Identify the different wildlife species occupying the urban-wildland interface;

    • Examine what landscape features (e.g., land cover type [deciduous forest], roads) are associated with species-specific detection and occupancy across the urban-wildland interface (i.e., wildlife-habitat associations);

    • Index seasonal variation in human presence and recreation type (e.g., hunting, hiking, biking) across the urban-wildland interface; and

    • Assess the spatial and temporal responses of wildlife, particularly carnivores, to seasonal differences in human recreation patterns across the urban-wildland interface.