We invited our friend, Benjamin Goluboff, to submit a guest post to our blog about a recommended read. We love his mind and we think you will too! Ben has led our Ryerson Reads book discussion series for eight seasons and is a professor of English at Lake Forest College. One of the many reasons to be an obsessive reader of the New York Times is the first-rate reporting on wildlife and wildlife conservation that the Times has offered over the years. Since 2010 theTimes has featured a section called Scientist at Work: Notes from the Field. This is a series of blog posts by researchers in various disciplines studying wildlife around the world. The Times calls the series a "modern version of a field journal, a place for reports on the daily progress of scientific expeditions -- adventures, misadventures, discoveries. As with the experditions themselves, you never know what you will find." Featured scientists have included the Field Museum's Doug Stotz conducting a biological inventory in Peru's northern Amazon, and Stanford University's Caitlin O'Connell-Rodwell studying elephant societies in Namibia. A particularly fascinating blog appeared last year by Roland Kays of the New York State Museum who tracked radio-collared fishers in urban and wild settings around Albany New York. Do Fishers really prey on house cats? Do Fishers really scream? Read Kays and find out. This winter I have been reading a series of blog posts (just concluded) by John Vucetich a wildlife ecologist from Michigan Tech who leads the wolf-moose Winter Study on Isle Royale National Park. Isle Royale is an island wilderness in Lake Superior. Roadless and accessible only by ferry, Isle Royale is a kayak and backpacker destination in the summer; in winter it is the site of the longest continuous study of predator-prey dynamics in the world. Since 1958 ecologists have monitored the shifting populations of wolves and moose on the island, deriving insights about the life-cycles of both species, and dispelling the myth that predator-prey interactions are governed by the "balance of nature." Learn more about the Winter Study here: http://www.isleroyalewolf.org/overview/overview/at_a_glance.html Vucetich's posts describe a winter spent flying transects over the island and snowshoeing across its interior following the Chippewa Harbor pack as it pursues moose in the island's deep snows. Along the way we learn something of the personality of the pack, the craft and determination of the researchers, and the shifting emphasis of the long-term study. Vucetich writes: "During the first two decades that scientists observed the wolves on Isle Royale, the predators had a very strong influence on moose abundance. Then climate replaced the influence of wolves over the next two decades. Understanding nature and the lessons of long-term research may require adjusting our sense of what counts as normal." The writing is crisp and the story is well told. A recommended read for Friends of Ryerson woods, Vucetich's blog can be found at: http://scientistatwork.blogs.nytimes.com/author/john-vucetich/ Benjamin Goluboff
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AuthorThis blog is written by the staff and partners of Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods Archives
February 2022
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