Sandra Lai
@sandralai.bsky.social
240 followers 140 following 43 posts
Postdoctoral researcher at WildCRU, University of Oxford Ethiopian Wolf Monitoring Programme | Arctic | Carnivores | Behavioral Ecology | Movement Ecology | Conservation | Ecosystem monitoring 🦊🐺❄️ https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Sandra-Lai-2
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Reposted by Sandra Lai
2025arcticfox.bsky.social
Anders Angerbjörn and Paula White kicking off the first day with important talks about the potential impacts of climate change on the Arctic fox 🔥❄️

#ArcticFoxConference2025
sandralai.bsky.social
It’s 5:30am at Winnipeg and some are more awake than others

#arcticfoxconference

@dominiqueberteaux.bsky.social
@audelalis.bsky.social
sandralai.bsky.social
On the way to the 2025 Arctic Fox Conference and reuniting with @dominiqueberteaux.bsky.social and @audelalis.bsky.social in sunny Winnipeg!

More coming, stay tuned!

@2025arcticfox.bsky.social
Reposted by Sandra Lai
dominiqueberteaux.bsky.social
Scientific American covered our #MovementEcology work on Arctic foxes a couple of years ago, beautifully illustrating their continental-scale dispersal across Arctic Canada, through islands and sea ice straits.🧪🌿🌎🦊🌐🦑🐻‍❄️ #wildlife. If interested, enlarge map below (with full reference to article).
Reposted by Sandra Lai
wildcru.bsky.social
Meet Postdoctoral Research Associate @sandralai.bsky.social! 🦊

As an ecologist and carnivore researcher, Sandra’s work investigates the behavioural adaptations of mammals in extreme environments, from Arctic foxes in the High Arctic to the endangered Ethiopian wolf.

[1/2] @biology.ox.ac.uk
Reposted by Sandra Lai
wildcru.bsky.social
EWCP, in partnership with EWCA, is leading the first large-scale preventive vaccination of Ethiopian wolves in the Bale Mountains. Combining vaccination and GPS collaring, we aim to protect the world’s rarest canid and the Afroalpine ecosystem they call home.
@biology.ox.ac.uk @sandralai.bsky.social
sandralai.bsky.social
🔥 I am thrilled to have been chosen as a 2025 Flag Carrier by WINGS Women of Discovery!

With their support, I’ll join the team in Ethiopia’s Bale Mountains to vaccinate and GPS-collar endangered Ethiopian wolves.

➡️ wingswomenofdiscovery.org/explorer/san...

@wildcru.bsky.social
@biology.ox.ac.uk
sandralai.bsky.social
New EWCP publication here ⬇️
doi.org/10.1111/csp2...

Find out more about our work and help us in our mission ⬇️
www.ethiopianwolf.org

@wildcru.bsky.social
@biology.ox.ac.uk

📹 Abdi Samune
sandralai.bsky.social
He was the first of his kind to be rehabilitated. This case proved something important: under the right conditions, and with careful planning, rehabilitation and release can work.

And in this case, one wolf made it count.
sandralai.bsky.social
Rehabilitation is not a simple fix. It is a last resort. But in a place where wolves live on the edge of survival, it gave this one wolf another chance at life. And he took it.
sandralai.bsky.social
From near death to starting a new lineage in the wild, his story has become a rare symbol of hope for a species with fewer than 500 individuals left.
sandralai.bsky.social
He didn’t just survive. After rejoining his original pack, he decided to disperse and settled in a new territory nearby. He found a mate. And in the following breeding season, he fathered pups. Today, the Terefe pack still exists.
sandralai.bsky.social
After weeks of intensive treatment, careful observation, and dedicated care in captivity, he miraculously recovered. He was named “Terefe”, meaning “The Lucky Survivor” in the local language. What happened after his release surprised even us.
sandralai.bsky.social
He was found by park scouts, who called us. EWCP, in collaboration with EWCA, immediately jumped into action. He was brought into care. But there had never been any record of an Ethiopian wolf being held in captivity... Could he make it?
sandralai.bsky.social
In 2020, a male Ethiopian wolf in the Simien Mountains sustained a severe leg injury caused by a gun shot. Unable to keep up with his pack, weak and bleeding, in a place as harsh and exposed as the Ethiopian highlands, that’s usually the end of the story.

But this time, it wasn’t.
sandralai.bsky.social
🌍🐺 Wolves Across Borders 2025 — EWCP joined the Himalayan Wolves Project and WildCRU colleagues in Lunteren to represent wolves from Africa, Europe and Asia.

A powerful global gathering sharing field insights and coexistence strategies.

Thanks to all who came to listen and share!
Reposted by Sandra Lai
dominiqueberteaux.bsky.social
Over the years, we've published multiple #MovementEcology papers using the Arctic fox as a model. But I’ve never shared this video of a flying Arctic fox!
Filmed on our Bylot Island study area by my former PhD student Clément Chevallier. #wildlife 🧪🌿🌎
Reposted by Sandra Lai
sandralai.bsky.social
EWCP is excited to join the pack!

Stay tuned as we share insights and highlights from the event! 5/5
sandralai.bsky.social
Wolves Across Borders—first held in Stockholm, Sweden in 2023—brings together more than 350 researchers, policymakers, managers, students and stakeholders to facilitate conversation and knowledge exchange on wolf ecology, management, and conflict resolution. 4/
sandralai.bsky.social
EWCP Science Director, Dr. Jorgelina Marino, and Senior Scientist, Dr. Sandra Lai, will be presenting our latest work on Ethiopian wolves in the highlands. 3/
sandralai.bsky.social
EWCP founder and director, Prof Claudio Sillero, will be giving a plenary talk on wolves in Africa, and will be part of a panel session on the wolf debate within dynamic politics, misinformation and social media. 2/
sandralai.bsky.social
EWCP delegates, Prof Claudio Sillero, Dr Jorgelina Marino and Dr Sandra Lai, just arrived in Lunteren, Netherlands, for the International Conference Wolves Across Borders 2025! 🧵1/

#WAB2025 #WildCRU #OxfordBiology #OxfordUniversity #WolvesBorders #conservation #research
sandralai.bsky.social
African wild dog playback experiment gone bad 😂

#PhDLife
#Fieldwork
#nevergiveup