<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/news/evaluating-the-best-method-for-monitoring-wildlife-to-understand-biodiversity-changes.aspx" dsn="blogs"><homehero>true</homehero><unit>Faculty &amp; Staff,Research,College of Natural Science,EEB,Integrative Biology</unit><pubDate>07/12/2022</pubDate><title>Evaluating the best method for monitoring wildlife to understand biodiversity changes</title><description><p>While studying for his Ph.D. at Michigan State University and working in Elise Zipkin’s Quantitative Ecology Lab, Alex Wright and his Ph.D. advisors set out to determine the best way to monitor wildlife to understand how biodiversity changes through time and space. A paper with their findings was recently published in <em>Ecological Applications. </em>The results will help conservationists optimize data collection to answer complex biodiversity questions at large scales.</p></description><author/><hero-image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/9C5AA753-CBC8-4145-87B0F7CFDDFBE75A_newsarticlehero.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></hero-image><image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/9C5AA753-CBC8-4145-87B0F7CFDDFBE75A_medium.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></image><tags><tag>biodiversity</tag><tag>faculty</tag><tag>graduate students</tag><tag>research</tag><tag>wildlife estimates</tag></tags></item>