People
Current Graduate Student Researchers
Bonnie McDonald - MS
Michael Procko - PhD
Rosemarie Pugh - MS
Sam Robertson - MS
Past Graduate Student Researchers
Lainie Brice, PhD, Quantifying the indirect effect of wolves on aspen in northern Yellowstone National Park: evidence for a trophic cascade?
Salomé Frévol, M.S. (Visiting Scholar, University of Paris-Saclay), Ecological genetics of Arctic wolves
Michel Kohl, PhD, The spatial ecology of predator-prey interactions: a case study of Yelllowstone elk, wolves, and cougars
Joel Ruprecht, MS, Demography and determinants of population growth in Utah moose
Lacy Smith, PhD, Intraspecific variation in prey susceptibility mediates the consumptive effect of predation: a case study of elk and wolves
Aimee Tallian, PhD, The behavior and ecology of cursorial predators andd dangerous prey
Past Undergraduate Researchers
Tim Cromwell, Spatial ecology of cougars along a wildland-urban gradient
Natalie D’Souza, Spatial ecology of cougars along a wildland-urban gradient
Jesse Godbold, Demography of Utah moose
Maggie Hallerud, Monitoring cougar activity in Cache Valley
Konrad Hafen, Demography of Utah moose
Rylee Jensen, Modeling carnivore interactions using activity and occupancy patterns
Daniel Johnson, Wolf-elk-aspen interactions in northern Yellowstone National Park
Heather Shipp, Using accelerometer data to remotely assess predation activity in High Arctic wolves
Nikki Tatton, Assessing global positioning system telemetry techniques for estimating wolf predation in the High Arctic
Bethany Unger, Habitat ecology of bobolinks