Skip to content

instagram_17932807119049633

๐ŸŒ Elephants in Tanzania, walruses in the Arctic, bison in Montana, and bears in the New York Adirondacks: These animals and their habitats have all benefitted from research conducted by graduate students in Clark’s Wildlife Conservation GIS Research Seminar over the past 13 years.

Each spring, a cohort has tackled a vexing biodiversity project for the Wildlife Conservation Society โ€” diving into high-resolution satellite imagery, remote-sensing technologies, and scientific datasets to uncover insights that support global conservation efforts.

This yearโ€™s mission was the most ambitious yet: combing through all of @thewcs’s global data to detect patterns and trends in environmental impact metrics across the organizationโ€™s managed conservation units worldwide.

๐Ÿ”— Read about the team’s findings at the link in our bio.
โ€”
๐Ÿ“ธ Members of Clark Universityโ€™s 2025 Wildlife Conservation GIS Research Seminar included Winnie Gross โ€™24, M.S.-GIS โ€™25; Andrew Niehaus โ€™23, M.S.-GIS โ€™25; Caleb Kluchman โ€™24, M.S.-GIS โ€™25; Saida Mousavi, M.S.-E&P โ€™25; Ben Spencer โ€™23, M.S.-ES&P โ€™25; Rory Dickinson โ€™24, M.S.-GIS โ€™25; Adlai Nelson โ€™24, M.S.-GIS โ€™25; and Tanner Honnef โ€™24, M.S.-GIS โ€™25.