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Bones and Backpacks
Fieldwork for the Isle Royale wolf-moose project—the oldest predator-prey study in the world—is led by researchers at Michigan Technological University and supported by volunteers. Last summer's researchers included two Huskies. Neither student minded being off their phones. Both put their cameras to regular use. Biomedical engineering major Wesley McGee and Jack Schafer, who majors in ecology and evolutionary biology, spent a month on Isle Royale beginning in late May as part of a four-student team. They backpacked roughly 150 miles both on- and off-trail to help research the relationship between moose, wolves, and environment. Their duties included measuring density and new growth of balsam fir—a primary winter food source for moose. They focused on more than 30 plots, including random locations and those moose are known to frequent.
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A Message from the Dean
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Ford Center Welcomes Students, Guests, and Many Improvements
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Outstanding SAF Student Chapter is Branching Out
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Going Places: Voyager Scholarship Takes Future Leader to the Next Level
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A Husky Hiring Huskies: Green Timber Consulting Foresters
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Making Tracks: News and Updates
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Programs Expand to Meet Demand with New Bachelor’s Degree in Environmental Data Science
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Celebrating Two Quiet Giants of the Forest Service
Re:Generations is published by the College of Forest Resources and Environmental Science.
- Executive Editor
David Flaspohler - Managing Editor
Cyndi Perkins - Production Manager
Jodi Miller - Copy Editor
Jessie Tobias - Design
Bob Gross - Comments to the editor: cmperkin@mtu.edu