Field-Tested: Michigan Tech Grad Hikes from Isle Royale Research to a National Park Service Career
For graduating Michigan Tech senior Jacob Sutter, wild places like Isle Royale National Park are where he finds happiness. His fascination with wildlife photography and Isle Royale led him to an internship experience you can’t find anywhere else in the world.
“I believe my summer on Isle Royale played a major part in why I landed the biological science technician position in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks,” he said. “Working with world-renowned wildlife biologists on a globally recognized predator-prey study gave me exposure to high-level field research. Observing wildlife directly in remote backcountry settings provided a unique learning experience that you simply cannot get in a classroom.”
Sutter chose Tech after seeing a mini-documentary featuring Isle Royale and the annual winter study of wolves and moose led by College of Forest Resources and Environmental Science (CFRES) researchers. He will earn his bachelor’s degree in wildlife ecology and conservation at MTU’s Spring Commencement tomorrow, April 25.
“I knew I wanted to contribute to the wolf-moose project,” he said. “Michigan Tech’s CFRES offered the hands-on field experience and research opportunities I was looking for.”
Find out how Sutter realized his dream to work with the wolf-moose project at Stories from Husky Nation.