Cedar Creek Spring Survey, Sat Apr 13

Post date: Mar 07, 2019 7:55:58 PM

The Cedar Creek Wildlife Survey The Cedar Creek Wildlife Survey is a joint venture between the Minnesota Wildlife Tracking Project and the University of Minnesota's Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve. It is a unique opportunity to improve your tracking skills, connect with nature, and help Cedar Creek scientists learn about the wildlife living on their property. You can read about our last winter survey here, and our spring 2018 survey here on our blog.

Spring Survey, Saturday, April 13

The Survey will be an all day affair. We will head out in teams to survey sand roads for animal tracks, then come back in to share our discoveries with one another. Each team will be led by an experienced wildlife tracker. Here is the schedule for the day:

8:30am Team Leads & Assistants Meet to Create Survey Routes

9:00am Gathering & Welcome at Lindman Center

9:30am Tracking teams leave for the field

--Lunch in the field--

~2:30pm Return from the field for mapping, debriefing and sharing

4:30pm Complete

This is an all-weather event. Please come dressed to spend most of the day outside in whatever conditions we have that day. Bring your own lunches and snacks. Weather permitting, we will eat lunch in the field. Cedar Creek will provide coffee and snacks in the morning.

Please register using our contact form, or write Caitlin Potter <caitlin@umn.edu> or Jonathan Poppele <poppele@umn.edu> to let us know you are coming. Please also let us know if you would like be a team lead or assist a team lead.

Want to Carpool?

We have a new tool to help coordinate carpooling. If you would like to share the trip to Cedar Creek, you can use our Group Carpool webpage to offer or request a ride.

Bring Your Questions

In recent surveys, our teams have identified the tracks of about 20 species including black bear, fisher, mink, red fox and grey wolf. We have been noting the behavior of deer, coyote and fox in relation to the shifting wolf population, and seeing some of our wolf track sightings verified by Cedar Creek's new network of trail cameras. A lot has been changing every season and we are looking forward to what we will find this summer. Some of the questions that have come up in recent surveys include:

    • What is the dynamic between the two wolves that we are seeing on the property? Are they both killing deer? When one takes a deer, do they typically share the carcass? Are they, as we are guessing, a male and a female? How are they relating to each other?

    • Many of our teams found a large number of weasel trails during our winter survey. Have we just gotten better at identifying their trails, or were they more abundant or more active this winter? Can we continue to spot their trails as the snow melts?

    • We have never identified fisher tracks during our spring, summer or fall surveys, but in our last winter survey we found their tracks all over the reserve. Can we locate and identify fisher track or sign when there isn't snow on the ground? Where would we look? And what does all this tell us about the habits of the fisher at Cedar Creek?

What questions do you have about the landscape, the animals and their behavior? We will take some time to share questions before we head out into the field.

Cedar Creek Spring Star Party

Cedar Creek is beginning a new partnership with the Minnesota Astronomical Society to offer Star Parties at Lindeman Center. The first Cedar Creek Star Party will be the same day as our Spring Survey--Saturday, April 13, beginning at 8:00pm. We invite you to stick around (or come back after dinner) for the first of several evenings of astronomy this year! We'll begin with a general-audience talk from one of our MAS experts, and then (conditions permitting) head out to the patio to look at the sky through a variety of telescopes. The event will be held rain or shine, although telescope time is weather-dependent.You can get more information, and RSVP for the Star Party, here.

About Cedar Creek

Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve is a 5,400 acre experimental ecological reserve operated by the University of Minnesota. It is located about 35 miles north of Minneapolis and St. Paul, just east of Bethel.

Cedar Creek lies at the boundary between prairie and forest. It is a mosaic of uplands dominated by oak savanna, prairie, hardwood forest, pine forests, and abandoned agricultural fields and of lowlands comprised of ash and cedar swamps, acid bogs, marshes, and sedge meadows. The area was first set aside in the early 1940s to be kept in its natural condition for scientific and educational purposes. Much of the land remains pristine, and has never been developed for agriculture. You can learn more at www.cedarcreek.umn.edu

The diverse, pristine habitat supports a wide variety of mammals. Species seen on the property over the Reserve's 75 year history include white-tailed jackrabbits, badger, fisher, fox squirrels, porcupine & spotted skunks. Reserve staff and scientists are looking for our help to update their index of mammals. If you are a beginner, the surveys will offer an overview of the diversity of Minnesota Mammals. For the advanced tracker, you might get to try your hand at distinguishing fisher from otter; fox squirrel from grey squirrel; and a variety of tiny mammal tracks. You can take a look at some of what our tracking teams have found on our iNaturalist Project Page

The property includes 25 miles of sand roads, which catch tracks beautifully. The roads will be grated shortly before our surveys, offering optimal tracking conditions for us to locate and identify a rich diversity of species.

Public access to the Reserve is limited. The Cedar Creek Wildlife Survey program offers you the rare opportunity to explore this exceptional landscape.

Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve

2660 Fawn Lake Dr NE

Bethel, Minnesota 55005

For a map & directions to Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve, click here