Understanding ‘Wolf’
July 13 - 16
Lamar Buffalo Ranch
No
Joanna Lambert, Ph.D.
Adult
Field Seminars
Wolves
Sold out: Please sign up for the waitlist.
Gray wolves are just one of approximately 6,000 mammal species on Earth today. But for you, they are very much more than just a biological species, and always have been. Why do gray wolves loom so large in myth and legend? Why do humans often despise and ruthlessly persecute wolves – the closest living relative of ‘man’s best friend’? In this seminar, you will explore the complicated 70,000+ year relationship that modern humans have had with gray wolves since we first encountered them dispersing from Africa into Eurasia.
Through engaging lectures, lively discussions, and as much time as possible in the field observing wolves (weather and conditions permitting), you will discuss your own evolutionary history and how you interact with wolves and other predators on the landscape. You will discuss ways of knowing and understanding another species from many perspectives – ecology, behavior, genetics, culture, and psychology. Woven throughout your discussions will be an exploration of the seemingly dichotomous relationship that humans have with wolves versus your beloved dog companions and how you can simultaneously revile and revere another biological species.
About the Instructor
Joanna Lambert, Ph.D. is a scientist and tenured professor of animal evolutionary ecology and conservation biology at the University of Colorado – Boulder. She has a deep passion for the natural world resulting in a career spent publishing and teaching about the ecology, evolution, and conservation biology of wild mammals. Her wildlife research has taken her to every continent on the planet though she has spent most time working in equatorial Africa (>30 years) and more recently in Yellowstone National Park where she studies canid biology. One of her proudest recent conservation-related contributions has been in the effort to restore gray wolves to her home state of Colorado, an initiative founded on the science of reintroduction and recovery of wolves to Yellowstone National Park.
We are continually updating and refining our COVID-19 mitigation measures to ensure the health and safety our guests, staff and volunteers. Read our COVID-19 guidelines for program participants.