Program Type:
LectureProgram Description
Event Details
Come join conservation biologist Geri Vistein as she takes you on a journey to discover who this important and resilient carnivore is, in a way you have never heard before. This presentation is all about us as well, since we share the landscape and our lives with Coyote. You can ask questions you have been wanting to ask, and share a dialogue that helps us all to understand better our very deep rooted relationships with all life.
Life on earth is deeply interrelated and complex. This presentation reflects this. It is comprehensive, touching on Anthropology, Archaeology, Prehistoric and Modern History, Native American life, Human Psychology and Belief Systems, Wildlife Science and Ecology, Animal Husbandry and much more. The focus is perception and relationships. The Coyote's relationship to Native Americans for example, and to European Americans. The Coyote's relationship with other wildlife and the ecosystem. And especially the Coyote's relationship with us today.
How do we share our lives with Coyote?
ABOUT THE PRESENTER
Geri Vistein is a Carnivore Conservation Biologist whose focus is carnivores and their vital role in maintaining the biodiversity of our planet. Her work centers on educating our Maine communities about carnivores, their ecology, their complex cultures and history, and how we can coexist with them. She achieves this by presenting various programs on carnivores to diverse audiences all over the state of Maine, working closely with our farmers who wish to learn coexisting skills, by creating outreach projects with artists, musicians, and puppeteers, offering experiential programs for our children, giving support to educators of our children, and collaborating with diverse community and agency organizations.
She is the founder of Coyote Center for Carnivore Ecology and Coexistence whose mission is to share with community members the science we know of our returning carnivores and the skills to live well with them.
Visit her two educational websites:
www.Farming with CarnivoresNetwork.com