Taking Action to Protect Michigan’s Rarest Butterflies
with Ashley Cole-Wick, Michigan Natural Features Inventory
Wednesday, January 22, 6:30-8:00pm on Zoom
Register here for join link
Ashley Cole-Wick works on interdisciplinary research teams to protect butterflies and other wildlife by providing high-quality data to decision-makers and thinking outside of the box for conservation. This program will focus on two of the rarest butterflies that call southern Michigan home: the Karner blue and Mitchell’s satyr. Join us to learn about local conservation and what you can do to help.
Ashley joined Michigan Natural Features Inventory in 2018 with a mission to protect our state’s rare species like the Mitchell’s satyr and Karner blue butterflies. While at MNFI she has also conducted rare species and ecological inventories on tribal lands, and has conducted surveys for aquatic plants, small mammals, land snails, freshwater mussels, aquatic snails, and various insect species.
A native Iowan, she received her undergraduate degree in Environmental Science and Policy at Drake University, where she worked with professors on butterfly movement studies in prairies, documenting a new Regal Fritillary population, which ignited her interest in the peril of endangered species. She gained an introduction to prescribed fire in Iowa through Drake’s Prairie Rescue & Restoration Program in 2003, and now provides information to land managers in making burn prescriptions that have the maximum benefit for rare species. Before moving to Michigan, Ashley spent time abroad, studying in Austria, working in South Korea and the Peruvian Amazon, and then completing a Master’s in Conservation Biology at the University of Alberta in 2013. She enjoys helping people better understand the natural world around them so that they can work to protect it.
The January 22 program is a virtual event and will be hosted on Zoom.
We can accommodate up to 300 participants.
Reserve your spot by registering here for the event.