Recent Voyageurs Wolf Project Photographs:
Summer 2025

Did you know? Voyageurs National Park is a destination for many migratory birds, such as the American White Pelican. Photo by: Alex Gross

Field Technician, Andria Barrett, during a cluster investigation near a beaver pond. Photo by: Maggie Baham

A bull moose stares back during an unexpected encounter on the Kabetogama Peninsula. Photo by: Alex Gross

A Sandhill Crane meanders on the edge of a bog in the Greater Voyageurs Ecosystem. Photo by: Alex Gross

Graduate student, Ian Smith, sitting alongside Little Shoepack Lake - an interior lake within Voyageurs National Park. Photo by: Alex Gross

During this time of year, beavers are active foraging aquatic vegetation within the safety of their ponds. However, they will start to shift towards more land-foraging during fall - making them more susceptible to wolf predation. Photo by: Alex Gross

Graduate student, Izzy Evavold, portaging a canoe on the Peninsula in Voyageurs National Park. Photo by: Maggie Baham

Drone image of an abandoned beaver pond. The beaver colony built four connected ponds, this one pictured being called "Half-Moon" pond. Photo by: Maeve Rogers

A scenic beaver pond lined with spruce and pine trees within the Greater Voyageurs Ecosystem. Photo by: Austin Homkes

Field Expedition participants hiking through mossy terrain and fall colors to an abandoned Paradise Pack wolf den. Photo by: Maeve Rogers

Our field technicians often have to traverse remote landscapes and portage canoes to multiple waterways on the Kabetogama Peninsula. Photo by: Alex Gross.
