Page values for "Restoring Fire, Wolves, and Elk in the Rockies"

"Project" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
DescriptionWikitext

Only 5% of Canada's native grasslands remain, and they are filled with North America's iconic species: wolves, grizzlies, bighorn sheep, moose, bison, eagles and more. Park managers set controlled fires to attract grazers like elk that eat invasive species and keep the prairies from being overrun. But elk attract wolves, and wolves scare away elk. Help Earthwatch scientists better understand these chain reactions to ensure that a healthy, balanced ecosystem is maintained.


Challenge

The remaining 5% of Canada's native grasslands are one of the last wild and intact habitats left in North America, containing species present in 1800. Over time, humans eliminated two key components of this ecosystem: wolves and wildfires. Park managers now set controlled fires to attract grazers like elk that eat invasive species and keep the prairies from being overrun. But recovering wolf populations might be scaring away the elk before they can graze away the invasive species.

Long-Term Impact

Research has shown that ecosystems containing fires, and top predators such as wolves, have greater biodiversity and are therefore more resilient to climate change. The data collected through this study will not only guide ongoing local management strategies, but will also help inform the larger, global conversation around predator-prey relationships (known as trophic cascades) and the role of fire in grassland-aspen communities.

References

  1. http://www.earthwatch.org
  2. http://earthwatch.org/expeditions/tracking-fire-and-wolves-through-the-canadian-rockies
  3. http://cristinaeisenberg.com/


Additional Documentation

https://www.globalgiving.org//pfil/21597/projdoc.pdf

Project Gallery

ProblemsList of Integer, delimiter: ,205,134 200,531
SolutionsList of Integer, delimiter: ,200,535
RegionTextCanada
countryText
stateText
cityText
coordinateCoordinates
scraped_urlTexthttps://www.globalgiving.org/projects/protecting-wolves-in-canada-with-earthwatch/
scraped_fromTextGlobalGiving
feature_imageFile
File:ph_21597_78479.jpg
imagesList of File, delimiter: ,[[File:ph_21597_78468.jpg|Aspen-grassland habitat in Waterton Lakes File:ph_21597_78469.jpg|Wolves in Waterton Lakes File:ph_21597_78470.jpg|Waterton after a prescribed fire File:ph_21597_78471.jpg|Dr. Cristina Eisenberg instructs volunteers File:ph_21597_78472.jpg|A howling wolf is caught on camera trap File:ph_21597_78474.jpg|Volunteers measure aspen tree growth File:ph_21597_78475.jpg|Elks are a keystone species in Waterton Lakes File:ph_21597_78476.jpg|An Earthwatch volunteer measures aspen tree height File:ph_21597_78477.jpg|Earthwatch volunteers collect data File:ph_21597_78478.jpg|A herd of elk ]]
videosList of URL, delimiter: ,
references_listList of URL, delimiter: ,
additional_documentationList of URL, delimiter: ,
organization_idInteger131,403
geo_idText6251999

"Organization" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
OrganizationText
RegionText
WebsiteURL
FacebookURL
TwitterURL
ProjectLeaderText