Wyoming Project
Wyoming Migration Initiative
July 2012 - December 2023
Personnel
Participating Agencies
- U.S. Forest Service
- George B. Storer Foundation
- Community Foundation of Jackson Hole
- Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
- Wyoming Game and Fish Department
- Private Donor
- Muley Fanatic Foundation - Commissioner's Tag
- McKnight Foundation
- Wyoming Department of Transportation
- University of Wyoming - Biodiversity Institute
- Wyoming Community Foundation
- Wyoming Game and Fish Department Commissioner's Tag
- Wyoming Wildlife: The Foundation
- Bureau of Land Management
- The Pew Charitable Trusts
- Storer Foundation
- U.S. Geological Survey
- Various
- Wyoming Game and Fish
- Wyoming Wild Sheep Foundation - Commissioner's Tag
- Foundation for North American Wild Sheep
- The Nature Conservancy
- Private Sponsors
- Various Private Donors
- University of Wyoming
- Muley Fanatic Foundation
- Knobloch Family Foundation
Wyoming's ungulate migrations, like the vast landscapes on which they occur, are a vital part of the state's cultural heritage. But corridors are facing new and ongoing threats, and their conservation is constrained by a still-incomplete understanding of migration ecology and by misconceptions among public stakeholders. In 2012, we created the Wyoming Migration Initiative (WMI) to enhance our research program, translate our research into actionable conservation tools, and expand our education and outreach to public and agency cooperators. The WMI has a broad goal of understanding and conserving ungulate migration routes through 1) migration research, 2) the development of conservation tools, 3) and public outreach and education. We conduct this work in collaboration with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department in addition to a wide variety of other state and federal partners and conservation groups. Current research is focused on mapping undocumented corridors and studying the benefits and challenges of long-distance migration. Our work on conservation tools focuses on creating a powerful archive of corridor data that can guide on-the-ground conservation and policy. Our outreach and education programs continue to tell the story of migration to a broad audience, focusing on "live" tracking of migrations, compelling new videos, storytelling, and resources for K-12 instructors.
Technical Publications | Publication Date |
---|---|
2012 Progress Report - WY Migration Initiative (6.13) | June 2013 |