TWS Urban Wildlife Working Group
@tws-uwwg.bsky.social
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The #UrbanWildlife Working Group (UWWG) is a working group of The Wildlife Society (TWS). International conferences are bi-annual. #IUWC2025
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Join us at this year’s TWS Conference #TWS2025 🐾

📅 UWWG meeting on Mon Oct 6, 12pm MT, Salon 10 (see our website for Zoom option: urbanwildlifegroup.org)

🧪Urban wildlife session to follow: 1:30-3:30pm Hall D

🍻Joint social w/ Wildlife Disease Working Group on Tue Oct 7, 6-9pm, @CRAFT Beer Market
The Urban Wildlife Working Group
urbanwildlifegroup.org
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
TONIGHT! We are hosting a joint social with the Wildlife Disease Working Group from 6-9pm at the CRAFT Beer Market (a short walk from the convention center). There will be a cash bar, and we will be providing some tasty snacks! See you there! #TWS2025 🍟🍻
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Reminder that this is happening today! See you there 💫
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Join us at this year’s TWS Conference #TWS2025 🐾

📅 UWWG meeting on Mon Oct 6, 12pm MT, Salon 10 (see our website for Zoom option: urbanwildlifegroup.org)

🧪Urban wildlife session to follow: 1:30-3:30pm Hall D

🍻Joint social w/ Wildlife Disease Working Group on Tue Oct 7, 6-9pm, @CRAFT Beer Market
The Urban Wildlife Working Group
urbanwildlifegroup.org
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Join us at this year’s TWS Conference #TWS2025 🐾

📅 UWWG meeting on Mon Oct 6, 12pm MT, Salon 10 (see our website for Zoom option: urbanwildlifegroup.org)

🧪Urban wildlife session to follow: 1:30-3:30pm Hall D

🍻Joint social w/ Wildlife Disease Working Group on Tue Oct 7, 6-9pm, @CRAFT Beer Market
The Urban Wildlife Working Group
urbanwildlifegroup.org
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
🌆🐾 The International Urban Wildlife Conference kicks off this weekend in Atlanta! We’re bringing together researchers and practitioners to explore the ecology and evolution of cities. Stay tuned for updates, session highlights, and behind-the-scenes glimpses of #IUWC2025! 🌇🦝🧬🌳
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Ready to connect with urban ecologists and wildlife managers from around the world? The International Urban Wildlife Conference starts June 1st in Atlanta! 🦝🎡🌎

Workshops, field trips, plenaries & more: www.urban-wildlife.org/about

#IUWC2025 #UrbanWildlife #UrbanEcology #UrbanEvolution
IUWC 2025 — International Urban Wildlife Conference
www.urban-wildlife.org
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
New logo, just dropped! 👀

#UrbanWildlife #UrbanEcology #TWS
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Don't forget to register for #IUWC2025! Peep our updated conference website to learn more about the workshops, fieldtrips, and speaker line-up that await you in Atlanta 🎡

www.urban-wildlife.org/about

#UrbanEcology #UrbanWildlife
About — International Urban Wildlife Conference
www.urban-wildlife.org
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
3️⃣J. Drew Lanham
🦅📖 Dr. J. Drew Lanham is a MacArthur Fellow, award-winning author, & Distinguished Professor of Wildlife Ecology who weaves conservation science with personal and cultural narrative of nature. #IUWC2025
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
2️⃣Shane Campbell-Staton
🦎🐘 Dr. Shane Campbell-Staton explores how human activity shapes species' evolution—from urban lizards to tuskless elephants. A passionate science communicator, he brings biology to life with Human Footprint & Evolution Earth. #IUWC2025
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
1️⃣Steward T.A. Pickett
🌿🏙️ Dr. Steward T.A. Pickett, Distinguished Senior Scientist at @caryinstitute.bsky.social, has spent decades unraveling urban social-ecological dynamics. A pioneer in the field, his recent work explores the ecology of segregation. #IUWC2025
Head shot of Dr. Steward Pickett
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
We are excited to share that we have THREE incredible plenary speakers presenting at #IUWC2025 this year! They will give talks that fit with our theme of Urban Reflections: What We’ve Learned About Nature, Our Communities and Ourselves. Stay tuned as we announce our speakers over the next few days 👀
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Don't forget to check out our awesome workshops at #IUWC2025. You can sign up during registration and learn more here:
www.urban-wildlife.org/workshops

#UrbanWildlife #UrbanEcology
Workshops — International Urban Wildlife Conference
www.urban-wildlife.org
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Reminder that this is happening TODAY from 1-3pm Eastern Time!
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
The Urban Wildlife Working Group is excited to announce a FREE workshop on Wildlife Field Worker Safety in Urban Spaces taking place on Zoom on February 24th from 1-3 pm Eastern Time. See you there! 🦺 #UrbanEcology #FieldWork

Register here: umd.zoom.us/meeting/regi...
Flyer for the Wildlife Field Worker Safety in Urban Spaces workshop detailing the date/time and Zoom link
Reposted by TWS Urban Wildlife Working Group
biorxiv-evobio.bsky.social
Size in the city: morphological differences between city and forest great tits have a genetic basis https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.02.05.636678v1
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
The UWWG values all of our members. We support DEI initiatives and will continue to support TWS DEI programs such as Out in the Field, Women of Wildlife, and the IDEA Working Group. We will foster an open and safe environment for all people at our events, including the upcoming IUWC in Atlanta.
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
This year at #IUWC2025 we have a ~new and improved~ Mentor and Mentee program. We pair early career folks with more experienced professionals to facilitate networking and communication at the conference. Visit www.urban-wildlife.org/mentormentee... for more information and to sign up!
Mentor/Mentee Program — International Urban Wildlife Conference
www.urban-wildlife.org
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
Registration is NOW OPEN for our 2025 conference! Register here by April 15th for a discounted rate: form.jotform.com/242624786774...

#UrbanEcology #UrbanWildlife #IUWC2025
tws-uwwg.bsky.social
The Urban Wildlife Working Group is excited to announce a FREE workshop on Wildlife Field Worker Safety in Urban Spaces taking place on Zoom on February 24th from 1-3 pm Eastern Time. See you there! 🦺 #UrbanEcology #FieldWork

Register here: umd.zoom.us/meeting/regi...
Flyer for the Wildlife Field Worker Safety in Urban Spaces workshop detailing the date/time and Zoom link
Reposted by TWS Urban Wildlife Working Group
Reposted by TWS Urban Wildlife Working Group
earthdotcom.bsky.social
Coyotes live longer in densely populated human areas: Researchers tracking coyotes in Chicago discovered that densely populated human areas are linked to longer coyote lifespans.

#UrbanCoyotes #WildlifeAdaptation #HumanWildlifeInteraction #UrbanEcology #CoyoteSurvival #EarthDotCom #EarthSnap #Earth
Coyotes live longer in densely populated human areas
Researchers tracking coyotes in Chicago discovered that densely populated human areas are linked to longer coyote lifespans.
www.earth.com
Reposted by TWS Urban Wildlife Working Group
avianbiology.bsky.social
NEW PAPER: diet, but not blood parasite infection, influence microbiota diversity in house sparrows, suggesting local microbial adaptations to urban habitats.

➡️ https://vist.ly/3msntki

#Ornithology #UrbanEcology #Microbiota #Birds #AvianMalariahref="https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:xcdhjuzb7t6aqdy5ii5q275y" class="hover:underline text-blue-600 dark:text-sky-400" target="_blank" rel="noopener">ria <a href="https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:xcdhjuzb7t6aqdy5ii5q275y" class="hover:underline text-blue-600 dark:text-sky-400" target="_blank" rel="noopener">@NordicOikos.bsky.social
House sparrow. Photo by Arnold Paul, Wikimedia Commons Fig. 2 from the article: Effect of sampling location (A), (B) and infection status (C), (D) on microbiome alpha diversity.
Reposted by TWS Urban Wildlife Working Group
wildlifebiology.bsky.social
Ontogeny of foraging behaviour in an opportunistic gull inhabiting urban marine ecosystems wlb3.01406 #Gulls #Foraging #UrbanEcology
Reposted by TWS Urban Wildlife Working Group
earthdotcom.bsky.social
Birds of prey in medieval Britain feasted on human scraps: New research reveals that medieval birds of prey, including red kites and buzzards, thrived on human leftovers rather than hunting live prey.

#MedievalBirds #RedKites #Buzzards #HumanWaste #UrbanEcology #EarthDotCom #EarthSnap #Earth
Birds of prey in medieval times survived on human scraps rather than hunting
New research reveals that medieval birds of prey, including red kites and buzzards, thrived on human leftovers rather than hunting live prey.
www.earth.com