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WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE EXPERIENCE: 2018-present Associate Research Professor Pennsylvania State University, Department of Biology 2010-present Founder, Chief Executive Officer & Principal Scientist Wild Nature Institute, an independent science, education & advocacy organization. DONATE TO PROTECT WILD NATURE Mail your donation to: Wild Nature Institute. P.O. Box 44. Weaverville, North Carolina 28787. Generous Donations of more than $500 will receive a thank-you gift of. a Print or Canvas Painting of any Photo from our Blog! Email Derek for Details of this Offer. FOREST FIRE AND INSECT OUTBREAKS CREATE SNAG FOREST The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into improved forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that conserve snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation.FOREST FIRE TRUTHS
Some Like It Hot: The Truth About Forest FireMonica L. Bond and Richard L. Hutto. Hardly anyone rejoices when they hear of a catastrophic fire raging through a forest. And yet the fact is the hottest, most severe fire is as ecologically necessary and beneficial for western forests as rainfall or sunlight. For 60 years, Smokey Bearhas assured
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG Giraffe Girl Gangs are Important to Giraffe Populations. Female Masai giraffes live in distinct social communities of up to 90 other friends, and although areas used by these ‘girl gangs’ often overlap, they have very different rates of reproduction and calf survival. This means the girl gang social units may be important togiraffe evolution.
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG The distinctive hyena is one of the most interesting and important carnivores in the African savanna. While more closely related to the viverrids (mongooses and civets), hyenas are behaviorally more similar to canines in that they do not climb trees and they catch prey with their teeth rather than claws. Spotted hyena in Tarangire NationalPark
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: SCIENCE TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's scientists conduct original field research, analyze existing available data, and synthesize primary scientific literature. Our main projects include Masai giraffe research and protection in Tarangire and Serengeti National Parks, saving the Tarangire wildebeest migration, Spotted Owl habitat protection, and preserving burned and beetle-killed forest habitat forthe
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: EDUCATION TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that protect snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
OUR INTERNATIONAL TEAM Our International Team. Doug Cavener, PhD, is a geneticist and evolutionary biologist and professor of biology at Penn State University and Adjunct Professor of Life Sciences at Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science and Technology in Arusha, Tanzania. He led an international team to sequence the giraffe genome for the firsttime, which
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Wild Nature Institute celebrated the international day of forests by planting trees at Eunoto primary school, at Mungere village. A total of 150 native trees were planted with the help of students. Each student dug a hole and prepared organic manure from cow droppings and did the planting and watering themselves. ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION Giraffe-Themed Environmental Education Juma the Giraffe is part of an ongoing series of children’s educational materials produced by the Wild Nature Institute that teach ecological and social lessons, build national pride in Tanzanian wildlife, and motivate children to learn about their natural world. Juma the Giraffe is a heartwarming story about how every individual is unique and special DONATE TO THE WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Mail your donation to: Wild Nature Institute. P.O. Box 44. Weaverville, North Carolina 28787. Generous Donations of more than $500 will receive a thank-you gift of. a Print or Canvas Painting of any Photo from our Blog! Email Derek for Details of this Offer. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: MONICA L. BOND Monica L. Bond, PhD. wildlife biologist & biodiversity activist. Principal Scientist for Wild Nature Institute. Research Associate at University of Zurich. Research Interests: Sociality and demography of giraffes in Tanzania. Spatial & temporal abundance and distribution of ungulates in a fragmented ecosystem of Tanzania. Fire ecology of FOREST FIRE AND INSECT OUTBREAKS CREATE SNAG FOREST The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into improved forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that conserve snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
VEILA - WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Veila Makundi Anne Innis Dagg Education Coordinator for Wild Nature Institute Veila Makundi implements the 'Celebrating Africa's Giants' education program for Wild Nature Institute and the 'Living in Harmony With Your Natural Surroundings' education program for PAMS Foundation in primary and secondary schools throughout the Tarangire-ManyaraEcosystem.
TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: SCIENCE TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's scientists conduct original field research, analyze existing available data, and synthesize primary scientific literature. Our main projects include Masai giraffe research and protection in Tarangire and Serengeti National Parks, saving the Tarangire wildebeest migration, Spotted Owl habitat protection, and preserving burned and beetle-killed forest habitat forthe
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: EDUCATION TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that protect snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
OUR INTERNATIONAL TEAM Our International Team. Doug Cavener, PhD, is a geneticist and evolutionary biologist and professor of biology at Penn State University and Adjunct Professor of Life Sciences at Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science and Technology in Arusha, Tanzania. He led an international team to sequence the giraffe genome for the firsttime, which
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Wild Nature Institute celebrated the international day of forests by planting trees at Eunoto primary school, at Mungere village. A total of 150 native trees were planted with the help of students. Each student dug a hole and prepared organic manure from cow droppings and did the planting and watering themselves. ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION Giraffe-Themed Environmental Education Juma the Giraffe is part of an ongoing series of children’s educational materials produced by the Wild Nature Institute that teach ecological and social lessons, build national pride in Tanzanian wildlife, and motivate children to learn about their natural world. Juma the Giraffe is a heartwarming story about how every individual is unique and special DONATE TO THE WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Mail your donation to: Wild Nature Institute. P.O. Box 44. Weaverville, North Carolina 28787. Generous Donations of more than $500 will receive a thank-you gift of. a Print or Canvas Painting of any Photo from our Blog! Email Derek for Details of this Offer. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: MONICA L. BOND Monica L. Bond, PhD. wildlife biologist & biodiversity activist. Principal Scientist for Wild Nature Institute. Research Associate at University of Zurich. Research Interests: Sociality and demography of giraffes in Tanzania. Spatial & temporal abundance and distribution of ungulates in a fragmented ecosystem of Tanzania. Fire ecology of FOREST FIRE AND INSECT OUTBREAKS CREATE SNAG FOREST The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into improved forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that conserve snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
VEILA - WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Veila Makundi Anne Innis Dagg Education Coordinator for Wild Nature Institute Veila Makundi implements the 'Celebrating Africa's Giants' education program for Wild Nature Institute and the 'Living in Harmony With Your Natural Surroundings' education program for PAMS Foundation in primary and secondary schools throughout the Tarangire-ManyaraEcosystem.
TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: SCIENCE TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's scientists conduct original field research, analyze existing available data, and synthesize primary scientific literature. Our main projects include Masai giraffe research and protection in Tarangire and Serengeti National Parks, saving the Tarangire wildebeest migration, Spotted Owl habitat protection, and preserving burned and beetle-killed forest habitat forthe
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: EDUCATION TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that protect snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
OUR INTERNATIONAL TEAM Our International Team. Doug Cavener, PhD, is a geneticist and evolutionary biologist and professor of biology at Penn State University and Adjunct Professor of Life Sciences at Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science and Technology in Arusha, Tanzania. He led an international team to sequence the giraffe genome for the firsttime, which
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Wild Nature Institute celebrated the international day of forests by planting trees at Eunoto primary school, at Mungere village. A total of 150 native trees were planted with the help of students. Each student dug a hole and prepared organic manure from cow droppings and did the planting and watering themselves. ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION Giraffe-Themed Environmental Education Juma the Giraffe is part of an ongoing series of children’s educational materials produced by the Wild Nature Institute that teach ecological and social lessons, build national pride in Tanzanian wildlife, and motivate children to learn about their natural world. Juma the Giraffe is a heartwarming story about how every individual is unique and special DONATE TO THE WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Mail your donation to: Wild Nature Institute. P.O. Box 44. Weaverville, North Carolina 28787. Generous Donations of more than $500 will receive a thank-you gift of. a Print or Canvas Painting of any Photo from our Blog! Email Derek for Details of this Offer. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: MONICA L. BOND Monica L. Bond, PhD. wildlife biologist & biodiversity activist. Principal Scientist for Wild Nature Institute. Research Associate at University of Zurich. Research Interests: Sociality and demography of giraffes in Tanzania. Spatial & temporal abundance and distribution of ungulates in a fragmented ecosystem of Tanzania. Fire ecology of FOREST FIRE AND INSECT OUTBREAKS CREATE SNAG FOREST The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into improved forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that conserve snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
VEILA - WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Veila Makundi Anne Innis Dagg Education Coordinator for Wild Nature Institute Veila Makundi implements the 'Celebrating Africa's Giants' education program for Wild Nature Institute and the 'Living in Harmony With Your Natural Surroundings' education program for PAMS Foundation in primary and secondary schools throughout the Tarangire-ManyaraEcosystem.
TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: ABOUT US Popular Media About Wild Nature Institute: "Why A.I. trained to recognize giraffe torsos" in Futurity, "Toward automated animal identification in wildlife research" in Science Daily, "Machine Learning can be used for automating animal identification in wildlife research" in Express Computer, "Researchers work to find the giraffe in the bushes" in Phys.org, 2019 WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: DEREK E. LEE learn more about the Wild nature institute. Derek E. Lee, Ph.D. quantitative ecologist & population biologist. Principal Scientist of Wild Nature Institute. Associate Research Professor at Penn State University. Research Interests: Conservation Biology. Demography & Population Ecology. SERENGETI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION RESEARCH We are monitoring more than 3500 individual giraffes throughout their lifetimes in an area over 25,000 sq. km. This is the biggest giraffe study in the world, and one of the biggest large-mammal demography studies in history. Our research supports communities working to protect and connect areas important to Masai giraffe conservation. SPOTTED OWLS AND FIRE The Spotted Owl ( Strix occidentalis) is one of the most iconic old-growth-dependent bird species in the Pacific Northwest, California, and Southwest. This imperiled bird of prey typically nests, roosts, and forages in dense conifer and mixed conifer-oak forests dominated by large, old trees and peppered with big, decadent snags and fallen logs. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Tuwatunza Twiga: Music for Giraffe Conservation In 2018, Wild Nature Institute commissioned a local gospel choir to record the song Tuwatunze Twiga, which means “let’s protect giraffes.”The song describes how giraffes are beautiful and God tells people to conserve giraffes, but that giraffes are threatened by poaching. MASAI GIRAFFE CONSERVATION PROJECT Precision, accuracy, and costs of survey methods for giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was one of our first publications from the project. We estimated giraffe density and abundance in the Tarangire Ecosystem in northern Tanzania using two ground survey methods—distance sampling and capture-mark-recapture—and compared our ground-based estimates with those from the most recent aerial survey. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG A fire is a feast for some animals, such as birds that come to sites of fires to eat grasshoppers, stick insects, beetles, mice, and lizards that are killed or driven out by the fire. Underground holes and crevices provide a safe refuge for small creatures. Larger animals are usually able to run fast enough to escape the fire. TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE BLOG 7/6/2012. 0 Comments. Scavengers are animals that eat dead animals. In the Maasai Steppe Ecosystem where the Wild Nature Institute's scientists work, there are many scavengers which feed on the numerous animals that die from natural causes, or clean up the carcasses after a predator is finished. Vultures, hyenas, jackals, and even predators WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: SCIENCE TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's scientists conduct original field research, analyze existing available data, and synthesize primary scientific literature. Our main projects include Masai giraffe research and protection in Tarangire and Serengeti National Parks, saving the Tarangire wildebeest migration, Spotted Owl habitat protection, and preserving burned and beetle-killed forest habitat forthe
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: EDUCATION TO PROTECT WILD NATURE The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that protect snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
OUR INTERNATIONAL TEAM Our International Team. Doug Cavener, PhD, is a geneticist and evolutionary biologist and professor of biology at Penn State University and Adjunct Professor of Life Sciences at Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science and Technology in Arusha, Tanzania. He led an international team to sequence the giraffe genome for the firsttime, which
WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Wild Nature Institute celebrated the international day of forests by planting trees at Eunoto primary school, at Mungere village. A total of 150 native trees were planted with the help of students. Each student dug a hole and prepared organic manure from cow droppings and did the planting and watering themselves. ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION Giraffe-Themed Environmental Education Juma the Giraffe is part of an ongoing series of children’s educational materials produced by the Wild Nature Institute that teach ecological and social lessons, build national pride in Tanzanian wildlife, and motivate children to learn about their natural world. Juma the Giraffe is a heartwarming story about how every individual is unique and special DONATE TO THE WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Mail your donation to: Wild Nature Institute. P.O. Box 44. Weaverville, North Carolina 28787. Generous Donations of more than $500 will receive a thank-you gift of. a Print or Canvas Painting of any Photo from our Blog! Email Derek for Details of this Offer. WILD NATURE INSTITUTE: MONICA L. BOND Monica L. Bond, PhD. wildlife biologist & biodiversity activist. Principal Scientist for Wild Nature Institute. Research Associate at University of Zurich. Research Interests: Sociality and demography of giraffes in Tanzania. Spatial & temporal abundance and distribution of ungulates in a fragmented ecosystem of Tanzania. Fire ecology of FOREST FIRE AND INSECT OUTBREAKS CREATE SNAG FOREST The Wild Nature Institute's goal is to ensure that research on forest fire, insect outbreaks, and wildlife is translated into improved forest-protection policies and effective forest-management activities that conserve snag forests: a critical, scarce, and misunderstoodwildlife habitat.
VEILA - WILD NATURE INSTITUTE Veila Makundi Anne Innis Dagg Education Coordinator for Wild Nature Institute Veila Makundi implements the 'Celebrating Africa's Giants' education program for Wild Nature Institute and the 'Living in Harmony With Your Natural Surroundings' education program for PAMS Foundation in primary and secondary schools throughout the Tarangire-ManyaraEcosystem.
TARANGIRE UNGULATE OBSERVATORY: TUNGO AFRICAN WILDLIFE The Tarangire Ecosystem in Africa is a global hotspot for wildlife, but most of the area is not protected. Scientists from Wild Nature Institute are conducting surveys of hoofed mammals (also called ungulates) throughout the ecosystem to provide scientific data for African wildlife conservation.* Science
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------------------------- WILD NATURE INSTITUTE'S SCIENCE, EDUCATION, AND ADVOCACY PROGRAM IS WORKING TO SAVE THE GIRAFFES ------------------------- Save Giraffes music video written and performed by the very talented Shubert Mwarabu featuring Antonia and Prey D. Produced by WildNature Institute.
------------------------- VIDEOS ABOUT OUR AFRICAN WILDLIFE SCIENCE AND PROTECTION WORK THE MAASAI GIRAFFE - DESCRIBES OUR GIRAFFE RESEARCH PROGRAM INSPIRING GIRAFFE PROTECTION THROUGH EDUCATION THE FORGOTTEN MIGRATION - A STORY ABOUT THE TARANGIRE WILDEBEESTMIGRATION
VIDEOS ABOUT OUR WORK TO PROTECT BURNED FORESTS IN THE WESTERN UNITEDSTATES
THE BEAUTY OF BURNED FORESTS A NEW MESSAGE FOR SMOKEY ------------------------- The world is in the midst of a climate crisis that is made worse by a biodiversity crisis. Wild Nature Institute programs address these two crises at the same time through science, education, and actions. Protecting Wild Nature and Biodiversity is our best defense against the climate crisis. Our scientists conduct original field research, analyze existing available data, and synthesize primary scientific literature to inform education and actions that protect wild nature. Our main projects include Masai giraffe research and protection in Tanzania, saving the Tarangire wildebeest migration, native forest protection, and environmental education to teach children and adults the value of protecting wild nature. We support the Nature Needs Half movement, the Half Earth project, the Green New Deal, Extinction Rebellion, Climate Strike for Action, and other similar movements to protect our planetary life-support system. We disseminate our results in reports and peer-reviewed publications, presentations at scientific and management conferences, articles and editorials in the media, meetings with decision-makers, comments on land-management plans, and other innovative outlets such as the videos on this website. ------------------------- In Partnership With These Great Organizations Who Support Wild Nature ------------------------- Wild Nature Institute offsets all our carbon emissions Wild Nature Institute is committed to nonprofit transparency -------------------------Home
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