Education
Ph. D, University of Wisconsin - Madison 2020.
MS, University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point 2013.
BA, Bates College 2004.
MS, University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point 2013.
BA, Bates College 2004.
Publications
* J. Clare, P. de Valpine, D. Moanga, M. Tingley, and S. R. Beissinger. A cloudy forecast for predicting species distributions: California birds communities after a century of climate and land-use change. In revision. Global Change Biology.
* L.A. Nunes, T. Tai, B. Zuckerberg, J. Clare, S. Jepsen, J. Strange, and C. Gratton. Local floral abundance influences bumble bee occupancy more than urban-agricultural landscape context. In revision. Insect Conservation and Biodiversity.
18) J. Clare, B. Zuckerberg, N. Liu, J. L. Stenglein, T. R. Van Deelen, J. N. Pauli, and P. A. Townsend. 2023. A phenology of fear: investigating scale and seasonality in predator-prey games between wolves and white-tailed deer. Ecology 104:e4019.
17) N. A. Gilbert, K. A. McGinn, L. A. Nunes, A. A. Shipley. J. Bernath-Plaistaid, J. Clare, P. W. Murphy, S. R. Keyser, K. L. Thompson, S. B. Maresh-Nelson, J. M. Cohen, I. V. Widick, S. L. Bartel, J. L. Orrock, and B. Zuckerberg. 2023. Daily activity timing in the Anthropocene. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 38:324-336.
16) G.M. Jones, A.R. Keyser, A. Leroy, W.J. Baldwin, J.J. Keane, S.C. Sawyer, J. Clare, R.J. Gutierrez and M.Z. Peery. 2022. Bioregional-scale forest restoration limits megafires and supports rare species conservation in a changing climate. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. doi.org/10.1002/fee.2450.
15) J. McCabe, J. Clare, T. Miller, T. Katzner, J. Cooper, S. Summershoe, D. Hanni, C. Kelly, R. Sargant, E. Soehren, C. Threadgill, M. Maddox, J. Stober, M. Martell, T. Salo, A. Berry, M. Lanzone, M. Braham, and C. McClure. 2021. Resource selection functions based on hierarchical generalized additive models provide new insights into individual animal variation and species distributions. Ecography 44:1756-1768.
14) P. Townsend*, J. Clare*, N. Liu, J. L. Stenglein, C. Anhalt-Depies, T. R. Van Deelen, N. A. Gilbert, A. Singh, K. J. Martin, and B. Zuckerberg. 2021. Snapshot Wisconsin: networking community scientists and remote sensing to improve ecological monitoring and management. Ecological Applications: e02436. *Co-lead authors.
13) N. A. Gilbert., B. S. Pease, C. M. Anhalt-Depies, J. Clare, J. L. Stenglein, P. A. Townsend, T. R. Van Deelen, and B. Zuckerberg. 2021. Integrating harvest and camera-trap data in species distribution models. Biological Conservation 258:109147.
12) N. A. Gilbert, J. Clare, J. L. Stenglein, and B. Zuckerberg. 2021. A review of abundance estimation methods for unmarked animals with camera traps. Conservation Biology 35:88-100. Pdf
11) N. Liu, M. Garcia, A. Singh, J. Clare, J. L. Stenglein, B. Zuckerberg, E. Kruger, and P. Townsend. 2021. Trail-camera networks provide insights into satellite-derived phenology for ecological studies. Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation 97:102291. Pdf
10) J. Clare, B. Zuckerberg, and P. A. Townsend. 2021. Generalized models to account for false negative and false positive error in detection-nondetection data. Ecology 102:e03241.
9) B. Zuckerberg, J. M. Cohen, L. A. Nunes; J. Bernath-Plaisted, J. Clare, N. A. Gilbert, S. S. Kozidis, S. B. Maresh Nelson, A. A. Shipley, K. L. Thompson, and A. Desrochers. 2020. A review of overlapping landscapes: pseudoreplication or a red herring in landscape ecology? Current Landscape Ecology Reports 5:140-148. Pdf
8) L. Olson, T. Van Deelen, J. Clare, and M. Allen. 2020. Proximity to established populations explains moose occupancy in northern Wisconsin. American Midland Naturalist 183:24:37. Pdf
7) Clare, J., S. T. McKinney, E. Simons-Legaard, J. E. DePue, and C. Loftin. 2019. Satellite-detected forest disturbance forecasts American marten population decline: the case for supportive space-based monitoring. Biological Conservation 233:336-345. Pdf
6) Clare, J.D.J., [et al....]. 2019. Making inference with messy (citizen science) data: when are data accurate enough and how can they be improved? Ecological Applications 29:e01849. Pdf
5) M. L. Allen, M. Morales, J. D. J. Clare, E. Olson, J. Van Stappen, and T. Van Deelen. 2018. Is there
anybody out there? Occupancy of the carnivore guild in a remote temperate archipelago. Community Ecology 19:272-280. Pdf
4) Clare, J. D. J, S. T. McKinney, J. E. DePue, and C. Loftin. 2017. Pairing field methods to improve inference in wildlife surveys while accommodating detection covariance. Ecological Applications 27:2031-2047. Pdf
3) Clare, J. D. J., D. L. Linden, E. M. Anderson, and D. M. MacFarland. 2016. Do the anti-predator strategies of shared prey mediate intraguild predation and mesopredator suppression? Ecology and Evolution 6:3884-3897. Pdf
2) Clare, J. D. J., E. M. Anderson, and D. M. MacFarland. 2015. Predicting bobcat abundance at a landscape scale and evaluating occupancy as a density index in central Wisconsin. Journal of Wildlife Management 79:469-480. Pdf
1) Clare, J. D. J., E.M. Anderson, D.M. MacFarland, and B.L. Sloss. 2015. Comparing the costs and detectability of bobcat using scat-detecting dog and remote camera surveys in central Wisconsin. Wildlife Society Bulletin 39:210-217. Pdf
* L.A. Nunes, T. Tai, B. Zuckerberg, J. Clare, S. Jepsen, J. Strange, and C. Gratton. Local floral abundance influences bumble bee occupancy more than urban-agricultural landscape context. In revision. Insect Conservation and Biodiversity.
18) J. Clare, B. Zuckerberg, N. Liu, J. L. Stenglein, T. R. Van Deelen, J. N. Pauli, and P. A. Townsend. 2023. A phenology of fear: investigating scale and seasonality in predator-prey games between wolves and white-tailed deer. Ecology 104:e4019.
17) N. A. Gilbert, K. A. McGinn, L. A. Nunes, A. A. Shipley. J. Bernath-Plaistaid, J. Clare, P. W. Murphy, S. R. Keyser, K. L. Thompson, S. B. Maresh-Nelson, J. M. Cohen, I. V. Widick, S. L. Bartel, J. L. Orrock, and B. Zuckerberg. 2023. Daily activity timing in the Anthropocene. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 38:324-336.
16) G.M. Jones, A.R. Keyser, A. Leroy, W.J. Baldwin, J.J. Keane, S.C. Sawyer, J. Clare, R.J. Gutierrez and M.Z. Peery. 2022. Bioregional-scale forest restoration limits megafires and supports rare species conservation in a changing climate. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. doi.org/10.1002/fee.2450.
15) J. McCabe, J. Clare, T. Miller, T. Katzner, J. Cooper, S. Summershoe, D. Hanni, C. Kelly, R. Sargant, E. Soehren, C. Threadgill, M. Maddox, J. Stober, M. Martell, T. Salo, A. Berry, M. Lanzone, M. Braham, and C. McClure. 2021. Resource selection functions based on hierarchical generalized additive models provide new insights into individual animal variation and species distributions. Ecography 44:1756-1768.
14) P. Townsend*, J. Clare*, N. Liu, J. L. Stenglein, C. Anhalt-Depies, T. R. Van Deelen, N. A. Gilbert, A. Singh, K. J. Martin, and B. Zuckerberg. 2021. Snapshot Wisconsin: networking community scientists and remote sensing to improve ecological monitoring and management. Ecological Applications: e02436. *Co-lead authors.
13) N. A. Gilbert., B. S. Pease, C. M. Anhalt-Depies, J. Clare, J. L. Stenglein, P. A. Townsend, T. R. Van Deelen, and B. Zuckerberg. 2021. Integrating harvest and camera-trap data in species distribution models. Biological Conservation 258:109147.
12) N. A. Gilbert, J. Clare, J. L. Stenglein, and B. Zuckerberg. 2021. A review of abundance estimation methods for unmarked animals with camera traps. Conservation Biology 35:88-100. Pdf
11) N. Liu, M. Garcia, A. Singh, J. Clare, J. L. Stenglein, B. Zuckerberg, E. Kruger, and P. Townsend. 2021. Trail-camera networks provide insights into satellite-derived phenology for ecological studies. Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation 97:102291. Pdf
10) J. Clare, B. Zuckerberg, and P. A. Townsend. 2021. Generalized models to account for false negative and false positive error in detection-nondetection data. Ecology 102:e03241.
9) B. Zuckerberg, J. M. Cohen, L. A. Nunes; J. Bernath-Plaisted, J. Clare, N. A. Gilbert, S. S. Kozidis, S. B. Maresh Nelson, A. A. Shipley, K. L. Thompson, and A. Desrochers. 2020. A review of overlapping landscapes: pseudoreplication or a red herring in landscape ecology? Current Landscape Ecology Reports 5:140-148. Pdf
8) L. Olson, T. Van Deelen, J. Clare, and M. Allen. 2020. Proximity to established populations explains moose occupancy in northern Wisconsin. American Midland Naturalist 183:24:37. Pdf
7) Clare, J., S. T. McKinney, E. Simons-Legaard, J. E. DePue, and C. Loftin. 2019. Satellite-detected forest disturbance forecasts American marten population decline: the case for supportive space-based monitoring. Biological Conservation 233:336-345. Pdf
6) Clare, J.D.J., [et al....]. 2019. Making inference with messy (citizen science) data: when are data accurate enough and how can they be improved? Ecological Applications 29:e01849. Pdf
5) M. L. Allen, M. Morales, J. D. J. Clare, E. Olson, J. Van Stappen, and T. Van Deelen. 2018. Is there
anybody out there? Occupancy of the carnivore guild in a remote temperate archipelago. Community Ecology 19:272-280. Pdf
4) Clare, J. D. J, S. T. McKinney, J. E. DePue, and C. Loftin. 2017. Pairing field methods to improve inference in wildlife surveys while accommodating detection covariance. Ecological Applications 27:2031-2047. Pdf
3) Clare, J. D. J., D. L. Linden, E. M. Anderson, and D. M. MacFarland. 2016. Do the anti-predator strategies of shared prey mediate intraguild predation and mesopredator suppression? Ecology and Evolution 6:3884-3897. Pdf
2) Clare, J. D. J., E. M. Anderson, and D. M. MacFarland. 2015. Predicting bobcat abundance at a landscape scale and evaluating occupancy as a density index in central Wisconsin. Journal of Wildlife Management 79:469-480. Pdf
1) Clare, J. D. J., E.M. Anderson, D.M. MacFarland, and B.L. Sloss. 2015. Comparing the costs and detectability of bobcat using scat-detecting dog and remote camera surveys in central Wisconsin. Wildlife Society Bulletin 39:210-217. Pdf
Academic Presentations
P. Townsend, J. Clare, B. Zuckerberg, N. Liu, and J. Stenglein. 2019. Remote Sensing for Animal Distributions: citizens, trail cameras, and satellites. 2019. AGU, San Francisco, CA. Poster.
G.Jones, A. Keyser, A. Westerling, W. Baldwin, J. Keane, S. Sawyer, J. Clare, R Gutiérrez, and M Peery. 2019. Biogregional-scale forest restoration limits megafires and supports rare species conservation in a changing climate. Annual Meeting of the Wildlife Society, Reno, NV.
Clare, J, et al. (many other authors). 2019. Snapshot Wisconsin: trail cameras, citizen scientists, and remote sensing bring synergy to wildlife monitoring. Annual Meeting of the Wildlife Society, Reno, NV. Poster.
Clare, J. 2019. When occupancy isn't the (only) end-goal: generalized confirmation models for dealing with false positives in detection-nondetection data. Annual Meeting of the Wildlife Society, Reno, NV.
L. O. Olson, T. R. Van Deelen, J.D.J. Clare, and M. L. Allen. 2019. Proximity to established populations
explains moose (Alces alces) occupancy in northern Wisconsin. Midwest Fish and Wildlife, Cleveland, OH.
N. Liu, J. Clare, C. Anhalt-Depies, B. Zuckerberg, and P. A. Townsend. 2018. Large scale trail camera networks
enhance interpretation of satellite phenology for ecological studies. ForestSAT, College Park, MD.
P. A. Townsend, B. Zuckerberg, J. Clare, et al. 2018. Snapshot Wisconsin: trail cameras, citizen science,
and satellite imagery improve the resolution of wildlife management decision-making. North American Congress for Conservation Biology, Toronto, Ontario.
Clare, J., et al. 2018. Using behavioral observations to generate insights into the population patterns of a managerially important species. NASA Biodiversity and Ecological Forecasting Team Meeting, Washington, DC. Poster.
Clare, J., N. Liu, B. Zuckerberg, and P. A. Townsend. 2018. Assessing spatiotemporal behavioral
resource matching using joint sensor networks. US-IALE Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois.
Clare, J., et al. 2017. Evaluating and Mitigating Error in Crowdsourced Trail Camera Image Classification. Deliverable for Wisconsin Citizen Based Monitoring Network Partnership Program. Poster.
Clare, J., et al. 2017. Understanding seasonal variation in community structure by linking continuous
remote camera sampling and remote sensing. NASA Biodiversity and Ecological Forecasting
Team Meeting, Washington, DC. Poster.
Clare, J.D.J., C. Anhalt-Depies, J. Stenglein, T. Van Deelen, B. Zuckerberg, and P. Townsend. 2017.
Conceptualizing Error in Citizen Science. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, B.L. Sloss, T. Ginnett, and D.M. MacFarland. 2013. Estimating bobcat
density and habitat use in central Wisconsin. The Wildlife Society National Conference, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, B.L. Sloss, T. Ginnett, and D.M. MacFarland. 2013. Bobcat abundance and
habitat associations in central Wisconsin. Wisconsin DNR BSS Research Open House, Madison, Wisconsin. Poster.
Clare, J.D.J., and E.M. Anderson. 2013. To MARK or not to mark: comparing frameworks for bobcat
abundance estimation. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, and D.M. MacFarland. 2012. Does resource selection predict bobcat abundance?
The Wildlife Society National Conference, Portland, Oregon. Poster.
Clare, J.D.J., B.L. Sloss, and D.M. MacFarland. 2012. Genetic structure and source-sink dynamics of the
bobcat in northern Wisconsin. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wausau, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, and D.M. MacFarland. 2012. Estimating bobcat density in central
Wisconsin using scat-detecting dogs and remote camera grids. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wausau, Wisconsin.
MacFarland, D.M., G. Summers, J. Clare, and E.M. Anderson. 2011. “New research on black bear and
bobcat in Wisconsin.” Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin. Poster.
G.Jones, A. Keyser, A. Westerling, W. Baldwin, J. Keane, S. Sawyer, J. Clare, R Gutiérrez, and M Peery. 2019. Biogregional-scale forest restoration limits megafires and supports rare species conservation in a changing climate. Annual Meeting of the Wildlife Society, Reno, NV.
Clare, J, et al. (many other authors). 2019. Snapshot Wisconsin: trail cameras, citizen scientists, and remote sensing bring synergy to wildlife monitoring. Annual Meeting of the Wildlife Society, Reno, NV. Poster.
Clare, J. 2019. When occupancy isn't the (only) end-goal: generalized confirmation models for dealing with false positives in detection-nondetection data. Annual Meeting of the Wildlife Society, Reno, NV.
L. O. Olson, T. R. Van Deelen, J.D.J. Clare, and M. L. Allen. 2019. Proximity to established populations
explains moose (Alces alces) occupancy in northern Wisconsin. Midwest Fish and Wildlife, Cleveland, OH.
N. Liu, J. Clare, C. Anhalt-Depies, B. Zuckerberg, and P. A. Townsend. 2018. Large scale trail camera networks
enhance interpretation of satellite phenology for ecological studies. ForestSAT, College Park, MD.
P. A. Townsend, B. Zuckerberg, J. Clare, et al. 2018. Snapshot Wisconsin: trail cameras, citizen science,
and satellite imagery improve the resolution of wildlife management decision-making. North American Congress for Conservation Biology, Toronto, Ontario.
Clare, J., et al. 2018. Using behavioral observations to generate insights into the population patterns of a managerially important species. NASA Biodiversity and Ecological Forecasting Team Meeting, Washington, DC. Poster.
Clare, J., N. Liu, B. Zuckerberg, and P. A. Townsend. 2018. Assessing spatiotemporal behavioral
resource matching using joint sensor networks. US-IALE Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois.
Clare, J., et al. 2017. Evaluating and Mitigating Error in Crowdsourced Trail Camera Image Classification. Deliverable for Wisconsin Citizen Based Monitoring Network Partnership Program. Poster.
Clare, J., et al. 2017. Understanding seasonal variation in community structure by linking continuous
remote camera sampling and remote sensing. NASA Biodiversity and Ecological Forecasting
Team Meeting, Washington, DC. Poster.
Clare, J.D.J., C. Anhalt-Depies, J. Stenglein, T. Van Deelen, B. Zuckerberg, and P. Townsend. 2017.
Conceptualizing Error in Citizen Science. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, B.L. Sloss, T. Ginnett, and D.M. MacFarland. 2013. Estimating bobcat
density and habitat use in central Wisconsin. The Wildlife Society National Conference, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, B.L. Sloss, T. Ginnett, and D.M. MacFarland. 2013. Bobcat abundance and
habitat associations in central Wisconsin. Wisconsin DNR BSS Research Open House, Madison, Wisconsin. Poster.
Clare, J.D.J., and E.M. Anderson. 2013. To MARK or not to mark: comparing frameworks for bobcat
abundance estimation. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, and D.M. MacFarland. 2012. Does resource selection predict bobcat abundance?
The Wildlife Society National Conference, Portland, Oregon. Poster.
Clare, J.D.J., B.L. Sloss, and D.M. MacFarland. 2012. Genetic structure and source-sink dynamics of the
bobcat in northern Wisconsin. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wausau, Wisconsin.
Clare, J.D.J., E.M. Anderson, and D.M. MacFarland. 2012. Estimating bobcat density in central
Wisconsin using scat-detecting dogs and remote camera grids. Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wausau, Wisconsin.
MacFarland, D.M., G. Summers, J. Clare, and E.M. Anderson. 2011. “New research on black bear and
bobcat in Wisconsin.” Wisconsin Chapter of the Wildlife Society Meeting, Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin. Poster.
Awards/Scholarships
Wildlife Society. Biometrics Working Group Travel Award. $700. 2019.
Green Tree Garden Club. Aldo Leopold Scholarship. $1500. 2019.
UW-Madison Graduate School. SRGC-Conference Presentation Award. $1200. 2019.
UW-Madison Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology. Graduate Student Travel Award. $500. 2019.
Safari Club International - Wisconsin Chapter Scholarship. $1000. 2013.
National Merit Scholarship. $2500. 2000.
Green Tree Garden Club. Aldo Leopold Scholarship. $1500. 2019.
UW-Madison Graduate School. SRGC-Conference Presentation Award. $1200. 2019.
UW-Madison Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology. Graduate Student Travel Award. $500. 2019.
Safari Club International - Wisconsin Chapter Scholarship. $1000. 2013.
National Merit Scholarship. $2500. 2000.
Grants/Other Support
NASA. 'BioCube'. (Collaborator/Key Personnel) $852,000. 2021-23.
NASA. 'Leaves, Landsapes, and Lambda'. (Research Fellow granted Award) $120,000. 2016-18.
Wisconsin Citizen Based Monitoring Fund. 'Assessing Data Quality for Snapshot Wisconsin'. (Student Co-I) $1,657. 2016.
Maine Outdoor Heritage Fund. 'American Marten Population Dynamics and Monitoring Protocols'. (Student Co-I). $8,000. 2015. (offer declined).
University of Maine Graduate Student Government Small Grants. $405. 2014.
University of Maine Graduate Student Government Small Grants. $650. 2013.
NASA. 'Leaves, Landsapes, and Lambda'. (Research Fellow granted Award) $120,000. 2016-18.
Wisconsin Citizen Based Monitoring Fund. 'Assessing Data Quality for Snapshot Wisconsin'. (Student Co-I) $1,657. 2016.
Maine Outdoor Heritage Fund. 'American Marten Population Dynamics and Monitoring Protocols'. (Student Co-I). $8,000. 2015. (offer declined).
University of Maine Graduate Student Government Small Grants. $405. 2014.
University of Maine Graduate Student Government Small Grants. $650. 2013.
Teaching/Mentorship
Guest Lecturer, WLE 650 Demographic Estimation, University of Maine. 2015.
Teaching Assistant, WLE 250 Wildlife Field Techniques, University of Maine. 2014-2015.
Graduate Student Liaison, University of Maine Student Chapter of the Wildlife Society. 2013-2014.
Teaching Assistant, WLDL 450 Conservation Biology, University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point. 2012-2013.
Mentor, 3 undergraduate research projects, University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point. 2012-2013.
Teaching Assistant, WLE 250 Wildlife Field Techniques, University of Maine. 2014-2015.
Graduate Student Liaison, University of Maine Student Chapter of the Wildlife Society. 2013-2014.
Teaching Assistant, WLDL 450 Conservation Biology, University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point. 2012-2013.
Mentor, 3 undergraduate research projects, University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point. 2012-2013.
SErvice
Referee: Animal Conservation, Biodiversity and Conservation, Biological Conservation (2), Canadian Journal of Zoology, Conservation, Conservation Biology (2), Conservation Letters, Diversity, Diversity and Distributions (2), Ecological Applications (4), Ecological Indicators, Ecology and Evolution (6), Ecosphere, Global Ecology and Conservation (3), Journal of Animal Ecology (4), Journal of Wildlife Management (6), Journal of Mammalogy (3), Journal of Zoology, Land, Marine and Freshwater Research, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (5), Nature Conservation, New Zealand Journal of Ecology, PeerJ, PLoS One (6), Population Ecology, Scientific Reports (3), Southwestern Naturalist, Transactions for Social Computing, Western North American Naturalist (2), Wildlife Biology (2), Wildlife Research, Wildlife Society Bulletin.
Member
The Wildlife Society
Ecological Society of America
Member
The Wildlife Society
- Biometrics Working Group
- Spatial Ecology Working Group
- Wisconsin Chapter
Ecological Society of America
OutReach Presentations
Snapshot Wisconsin: Using Citizens and Sensors to Bring Wildlife Management into focus. Wisconsin GreenLifeXpo, Black River Falls, Wisconsin. 2017.
Bobcat distribution and density in central Wisconsin. WDNR Fur-Bearer Committee meeting, Madison, Wisconsin. 2013.
Bobcat occupancy and habitat associations in central Wisconsin. Wisconsin Fur School, Madison, Wisconsin. 2013.
Current bobcat research in central Wisconsin. Annual Meeting, friends of Mead/MacMillan State Wildlife Areas, Milladore, Wisconsin. 2013.
Estimating bobcat abundance in central Wisconsin using non-invasive techniques: updates. WDNR Fur-Bearer Committee meeting, Stevens Point, Wisconsin. 2012.
Bobcat population size in central Wisconsin: an update. Wisconsin Conservation Congress Fur Harvest Study Committee. Milladore, Wisconsin. 2012.
Estimating bobcat population size in central Wisconsin. Navarino State Wildlife Area, Navarino, Wisconsin. 2012.
Estimating bobcat abundance in central Wisconsin using non-invasive techniques. WDNR Fur-Bearer Committee meeting, Stevens Point, Wisconsin. 2011.
Density-habitat relationships for estimating bobcat abundance in central Wisconsin. Midwest Fur-bearer Workshop, Crex Meadows, Wisconsin. 2011.
Bobcat distribution and density in central Wisconsin. WDNR Fur-Bearer Committee meeting, Madison, Wisconsin. 2013.
Bobcat occupancy and habitat associations in central Wisconsin. Wisconsin Fur School, Madison, Wisconsin. 2013.
Current bobcat research in central Wisconsin. Annual Meeting, friends of Mead/MacMillan State Wildlife Areas, Milladore, Wisconsin. 2013.
Estimating bobcat abundance in central Wisconsin using non-invasive techniques: updates. WDNR Fur-Bearer Committee meeting, Stevens Point, Wisconsin. 2012.
Bobcat population size in central Wisconsin: an update. Wisconsin Conservation Congress Fur Harvest Study Committee. Milladore, Wisconsin. 2012.
Estimating bobcat population size in central Wisconsin. Navarino State Wildlife Area, Navarino, Wisconsin. 2012.
Estimating bobcat abundance in central Wisconsin using non-invasive techniques. WDNR Fur-Bearer Committee meeting, Stevens Point, Wisconsin. 2011.
Density-habitat relationships for estimating bobcat abundance in central Wisconsin. Midwest Fur-bearer Workshop, Crex Meadows, Wisconsin. 2011.
Press
“Wisconsin’s Deer Caught in the Act.” NASA Earth Observatory, May 22, 2018.
https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=92178
“Wisconsin Wildlife Says Cheese.” NASA Science, March 12, 2018.
https://science.nasa.gov/earth-science/applied-sciences/making-space-for-earth/wisconsin-wildlife-says-cheese
“Wild Cam Series: Bobcat Ranges.” The Wildlife Society, May 15, 2015. wildlife.org/snap-trap-series- bobcats-ranges/
“Counting Bobcats”. WKOW 27, October 27, 2011. www.wkow.com/story/15896378/counting-bobcats
“Rescued dogs helping determine Wisconsin bobcat population”. Lakeland Times, November 10, 2011. http://lakelandtimes55.1upprelaunch.com/main.asp?SectionID=13&SubSectionID=13&ArticleID=14151
https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=92178
“Wisconsin Wildlife Says Cheese.” NASA Science, March 12, 2018.
https://science.nasa.gov/earth-science/applied-sciences/making-space-for-earth/wisconsin-wildlife-says-cheese
“Wild Cam Series: Bobcat Ranges.” The Wildlife Society, May 15, 2015. wildlife.org/snap-trap-series- bobcats-ranges/
“Counting Bobcats”. WKOW 27, October 27, 2011. www.wkow.com/story/15896378/counting-bobcats
“Rescued dogs helping determine Wisconsin bobcat population”. Lakeland Times, November 10, 2011. http://lakelandtimes55.1upprelaunch.com/main.asp?SectionID=13&SubSectionID=13&ArticleID=14151