Find more projects

Offal Wildlife Watching

Zooniverse

project image
Main Project Information
Presented By Zooniverse
Goal
To better understand how species use deer hunter-provided offal
more»
Task
Identify and quantify wildlife species in project images
more»
Where
Global, anywhere on the planet
Description

IMAGES SHOW ANIMALS FEEDING ON THE REMAINS OF DEER The purpose of this research is to better understand what and when species use deer gut piles provided by deer hunters across Minnesota. Minnesota offers a unique opportunity to look at this across four different biomes and a large metro area. These areas have differing topography, vegetation, and human land use. All of these things are likely to influence the different scavenger assemblages found in each area. There are also several methods of hunting such as archery, rifle, and shotgun that may influence where a gut pile is located and which species visit. We ask deer hunters in Minnesota to place remote cameras on gut piles from freshly field-dressed deer. Volunteers leave cameras out for one month to capture all the scavenger species that use the gut pile. Scavengers have been shown to obtain high quality food from carrion without using the energy needed to capture and kill prey. A large amount of carrion available to scavengers is provided by apex predators, such as wolves, or the natural death of prey. Likewise, at certain times of the year, hunters can provide a significant source of carrion in the form of gut piles. The resource pulse of gut piles that hunters provide generally occurs over a small area and short period of time. This pulse represents a large input of gut piles into the ecosystem from animals that would otherwise not be available to scavengers. Carrion pulses have the potential to reduce predation on prey species by providing a less risky meal for predators. Alternatively, predators that consume carrion may also increase predation pressure on prey populations in the same environment when the carrion pulse is depleted. Since gut piles are provided by human hunters, the suite of scavengers and time that animals scavenge is likely to differ from carrion left by predators. Mere human presence on the landscape may attract wildlife. For instance, similar to their response to wolf activity, ravens respond positively to the sound of gunshots, because it means easy food. Large carnivores such as gray wolves and bears may also be drawn to hunter provided gut piles.

Project website: https://offal.umn.edu/

See more
How to get started

SciStarter Affiliate logo
  1. Click "Visit"
  2. On the Zooniverse platform (the host of this project) create a Zooniverse account if you have not already, and locate your Zooniverse username.
  3. Copy your Zooniverse username and paste it where instructed on your SciStarter dashboard's "Info & Settings".
  4. Click the save button or wait for the page to auto-save

You'll only need to do this one time. In the future, you'll go straight to Zooniverse to participate and you'll earn SciStarter credit each time!

Go to www.zooniverse.org/projects/embeller/offal-wildlife-watching. Register a new account, read through the brief tutorial and get started classifying images!

See more
Social Media
Special Skills familiarity with North American wildlife is helpful but not necessary.
Ideal Age Group Middle school (11 - 13 years), Seniors, Elementary school (6 - 10 years), Adults, High school (14 - 17 years), Graduate students, Families, College,
Spend the time Indoors
Ideal Frequency as often as you'd like!
Average Time Five minutes
Type of Activity Exclusively online,
Topics Animals, Nature & Outdoors, Ecology & Environment,
Training Materials https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/embeller/offal-wildlife-watching/about/faq
Media Mentions & Publications
Tags
Website Offal Wildlife Watching
Project Updated 07/28/2024, 04:45 pm UTC

Reviews (0)

0 Likes

    Log In or sign up to add your review.

    Off-site Project

    Projects You May Like