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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: Rooms 24, 25 clear filter
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Saturday, March 1
 

11:15am CST

Cemetery Prairies: A Matter of Life and Death
Saturday March 1, 2025 11:15am - 12:00pm CST
Over 20 pioneer prairie cemeteries are now Nature Preserves, but all are small. Larger preserves would theoretically support more species, be more stable, and be less likely to lose species over time. But the small remnant prairies are also valuable, especially since there are so few remaining prairies of any size. In this visual presentation, we will visit several pioneer cemeteries and consider their value, their problems, and some ways volunteers can contribute to their preservation.
Presenters
avatar for Jack Shouba

Jack Shouba

Board of Directors member, Friends of Illinois Nature Preserves
Educator, botanist, nature photographer, public speaker.Talk to me about any of the above, and tell me why you are at the conference.
Saturday March 1, 2025 11:15am - 12:00pm CST
Rooms 24, 25

12:30pm CST

Lessons From The Reintroduction of State-Endangered Blanding’s Turtles
Saturday March 1, 2025 12:30pm - 1:00pm CST
Reintroduction is a tool used in conservation biology to establish a new population of previously extirpated species. It is often necessary when habitat fragmentation prevents natural reestablishment. In freshwater turtle species, reintroduction is becoming more common, but questions about best practices remain due to their longevity. Here, we discuss results and lessons learned 4 years into an experimental reintroduced population of the state-endangered Blanding’s Turtles and explore adaptive management strategies to ensure this population reaches self-sustainability.
Presenters
avatar for Callie Klatt Golba

Callie Klatt Golba

Curator of Turtle Conservation, Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum of the Chicago Academy of Sciences
Saturday March 1, 2025 12:30pm - 1:00pm CST
Rooms 24, 25

1:15pm CST

Bats: Why we need to conserve them and how you can help
Saturday March 1, 2025 1:15pm - 2:00pm CST
This presentation will introduce the audience to the bats of Illinois, and their ecology and ecosystem services, and provide tips for aiding in bat conservation, including a detailed look at the latest innovations in artificial roosts for bats.
Presenters
JO

Joy O'Keefe

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences
Saturday March 1, 2025 1:15pm - 2:00pm CST
Rooms 24, 25

2:15pm CST

Exploring floral networks for bees, beetles, flies, wasps, ants, and bugs
Saturday March 1, 2025 2:15pm - 3:00pm CST
Photo documentation and voice recordings were used to document flower visiting insects at 12 nature preserves in west-central Illinois from 2023-2024. Bipartite network graphs were created to determine connections between groups of insects and flowers visited. While bees made up the majority of visitations (40%) other taxa including beetles, flies and even true bugs also made up a large percentage of the total visitations. By analyzing all of the pollinator groups together it may be possible to determine the importance of bee versus non-bee insects on flower reproduction and maintaining vegetative communities.
Presenters
AM

Angella Moorehouse

Illinois Nature Preserves Commission
KC

K.C. Carter

Pollinator Ecologist, Illinois Natural History Survey
Saturday March 1, 2025 2:15pm - 3:00pm CST
Rooms 24, 25

3:15pm CST

Examining Coyote Behavioral Tendencies Via Novel Object Testing
Saturday March 1, 2025 3:15pm - 4:00pm CST
As human influence has spread further into natural areas, some species have adapted their behaviors so they can live in proximity to humans. The coyote’s notorious behavioral flexibility has allowed the species to thrive in both natural and highly urbanized settings. To determine how environmental pressures from urbanization may influence coyote behavior, we examined coyote exploration tendencies by conducting novel object tests throughout the Greater Chicago Metropolitan Area. In this session, learn how something as seemingly simple as a garden gnome can elicit a variety of responses from one of the region’s top mammalian predators.
Presenters
KB

Katie Baughman

Wildlife Research Supervisor, Forest Preserves of Cook County
Saturday March 1, 2025 3:15pm - 4:00pm CST
Rooms 24, 25

4:15pm CST

Rethinking Lawns: lawn alternative plantings in natural areas and at home
Saturday March 1, 2025 4:15pm - 5:00pm CST
Turfgrass lawns are the number one irrigated crop in North America. Not all lawns are residential, some occur within or alongside parks or natural areas. In many of these spaces, turf is incidental, not required. Turning these lawn spaces into full restorations is often not feasible, but there are options for a “middle ground” – a planting that is short, like lawn, but that delivers ecosystem services over and above those provided by turfgrass. This session will discuss possibilities for lawn alternatives at home, as well as in parks and preserves where lawn alternatives can serve as a 'bridge' between highly developed areas and natural areas. The session will be about 35 minutes of presentations, with 15 minutes for questions and discussion.
Presenters
RB

Rebecca Barak

Chicago Botanic Garden
avatar for Lauren Umek

Lauren Umek

Chicago Park District
Saturday March 1, 2025 4:15pm - 5:00pm CST
Rooms 24, 25
 
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