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The Wild Things Conference Returns Saturday, March 1, 2025 - SOLD OUT

We’re thrilled to welcome you again to learn and share your expertise with our community. We’ve put together an exciting lineup of workshops and sessions from regional and national experts, plus meet & greets, video content, exhibitors, and sponsors. With over 140 presentations and discussion panels to choose from, the in-person program engages a diverse range of topics, research, and skills, and plenty of opportunities to meet with friends, old and new.

Thank you as well to our sponsors, scholarship supporters, and exhibitors who are all helping to make this another tremendously successful Wild Things.

Tickets for Wild Things 2025 are sold out. For additional information on the 2025 conference, visit wildthingscommunity.org.

**PLEASE NOTE: Some details are subject to change.**

NOTICE: Please be advised that photos and videos will be taken during Wild Things 2025. By attending, you consent to be photographed, filmed, and/or otherwise recorded. Your attendance on this event constitutes your agreement to the use of any resulting media by Friends of Illinois Nature Preserves for promotional, marketing, or any other purpose in perpetuity, without further approval or any compensation. 

Venue: Room 50 clear filter
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Saturday, March 1
 

10:15am CST

Harnessing Passion and Collaboration: Elevating Community Engagement and Education to New Heights through Social Media
Saturday March 1, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am CST
In the dynamic landscape of social media, the convergence of passion, expertise, and creativity can result in powerful collaboration to transform public engagement and education from ordinary to extraordinary. This session explores how organizations can effectively leverage social media to share information, enhance learning, and meaningfully engage communities. A case-study of a viral series created by The Forest Preserve District of DuPage County will share ways individuals from multiple disciplines came together to harness their passion, technical and creative skills, and knowledge to develop compelling, fun, and educational social media content that increased awareness of the District’s conservation mission.
Presenters
avatar for Jennifer Rydzewski

Jennifer Rydzewski

Ecologist, Forest Preserve District of DuPage County
Ecologist focusing on invertebrate species management at the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County.My projects include: -Mosquito management and West Nile Virus monitoring -Bumblebee surveys especially rusty patched bumblebees -Conservation Dog Detectors partnership -Invasive... Read More →
avatar for Ashley Chex

Ashley Chex

Forest Preserve District of DuPage County
avatar for Rianna Schwartz

Rianna Schwartz

Preserve Project Designer, Forest Preserve District of DuPage County
I love design, conservation, and tea! Feel free to say hi if you see me.
Saturday March 1, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am CST
Room 50

11:15am CST

Saving Aquatic Species: “Mussel Matters” Film Screening and Conservation Efforts at the Urban Stream Research Center
Saturday March 1, 2025 11:15am - 12:00pm CST
The session includes a screening of the original short film “Mussel Matters: Saving Critical Species in DuPage County”, created in partnership between North Central College, The Conservation Foundation, and Forest Preserve District of DuPage County. The film highlights local efforts to conserve the freshwater mussel population in Illinois. After the film, staff from the Urban Stream Research Center will share more insight into their work with freshwater mussels as well as other regional aquatic species in need of conservation.
Presenters
LR

Lea Rodbarry

Communications Specialist, The Conservation Foundation
Saturday March 1, 2025 11:15am - 12:00pm CST
Room 50

12:30pm CST

Roll call! Post-invasive cattail management implications for seeding of native species and habitat for waterbirds
Saturday March 1, 2025 12:30pm - 1:00pm CST
Hybrid invasive cattail (Typha × glauca) establishes dense monocultures throughout eutrophic Great Lakes wetlands. Large-scale restoration research at Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge [Saginaw County, MI] is currently assessing repeat harvesting treatments and cattail-derived-biochar application to reduce Typha dominance and address nutrient loading. Loyola University Chicago graduate researchers are exploring reintroduction of dominant wetland plants (hardstem bulrush & tussock sedge) post-cattail management in a greenhouse experiment. A second graduate study is investigating the impact of cattail management on waterbird occupancy, utilizing machine-learning technology and wildlife recorders. Results will inform land managers on potential solutions to address cattail monocultures to improve biodiversity.
Presenters
avatar for Madeline 'Madi' Palmquist

Madeline 'Madi' Palmquist

Loyola University
avatar for MacKenzie Michaels

MacKenzie Michaels

Graduate Research Assistant, Loyola University Chicago
Saturday March 1, 2025 12:30pm - 1:00pm CST
Room 50

1:15pm CST

TIERRA: Integrating Nature Based Solutions with Community Based Psychology
Saturday March 1, 2025 1:15pm - 2:00pm CST

TIERRA is a pilot project from the Brushwood Center’s Health, Equity, and Nature Accelerator program. This project aims to equip Community Health Workers in Lake County with the knowledge, skills, and tools for implementing nature-based, culturally competent, and trauma-informed interventions that improve mental health for communities impacted by environmental injustice and cultural trauma. The Brushwood Center in collaboration with community partners are working together to cocreate an 8 week intervention program focused on cultivating well being by building connections to the self, one’s community and nature by Transforming painful Internal Experiences for greater Resilience and Restoration through the practice of Acceptance (TIERRA).
Presenters
avatar for Jess Rodriguez

Jess Rodriguez

Coalition Building Manager and Nature & Forest Therapy Guide, Brushwood Center
Saturday March 1, 2025 1:15pm - 2:00pm CST
Room 50

3:15pm CST

Natural History of Chicago Area Hunting Wasps and Parasitoids
Saturday March 1, 2025 3:15pm - 4:00pm CST
This is an informal natural history discussion of the various hunting wasps and parasitoids you might encounter on flowers, fences, trails, and other habitats in the Chicago Area.
Presenters
avatar for Terry Miesle

Terry Miesle

Beespotter
Amateur naturalist specializing in native bees.Reviews spottings for Beespotter, engages in public outreach, bioblitzes, tours etc.Dayjob: Master Flavorist and Food Scientist.
avatar for alan molumby

alan molumby

University of Illinois at Chicago and James Woodworth Prairie
Saturday March 1, 2025 3:15pm - 4:00pm CST
Room 50

4:15pm CST

Guiding Migratory Bird Stopover Habitat Conservation in the Illinois Coastal Zone
Saturday March 1, 2025 4:15pm - 5:00pm CST
The coastal region of Illinois, a five-mile band hugging the shore of Lake Michigan is tremendously important for millions of birds that migrate through our area every spring and fall, stopping over at important stopover natural habitats that many people and partners manage, to rest and refuel on their migration journey. Audubon Great Lakes is excited to share a new interactive web tool to inform the enhancement of coastal habitat for birds during this critical migratory stopover period.
Presenters
avatar for Stephanie Beilke

Stephanie Beilke

Senior Manager, Conservation Science, Audubon Great Lakes
Saturday March 1, 2025 4:15pm - 5:00pm CST
Room 50
 
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