entrance to Genesee Lake School

Student-Authored Project Titles for CES 471

Fall 2024

  • Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources: Dumkes Lake Land Management Plan
    Avarie, Lacey, Michelle, Avani
  • Mequon Nature Preserve: Farm to Forest Management Plan
    Caitlyn, Gianna, Thurston, Nolan
  • Riveredge Nature Center: Good Neighbors Make Good Restoration Plans
    Gage, Andre, Gretchen, Courtney
  • Schlitz Audubon Nature Center: Buckthorn Busters, Oak Savanna Edition
    Alison, Chloe, Jordan, Luna
  • Ozaukee Washington Land Trust: Spirit Lake, An Ecological Restoration Management Plan of Partial Prairie & Oak-Hickory Savanna
    Nick, Zoe, Emily, Sierra

Spring 2024

  • Genesee Lake School: Land Management Plan
    Ben, Ryan, Leona
  • Lynden Sculpture Garden: Environmental Management Plan
    Laura, Catherine, Maeve, Ian
  • Aldo Leopold Foundation: A Sculptured Landscape, Unit 8b Planting Plan
    Bailey, Hassan, Elena, Jack
  • River Revitalization Foundation: Future Management of Turtle Park
    Nicole, Amanda, Riley, Alex
  • Mequon Nature Preserve: Reimagining 66 Acres, A Natural Resource Management Plan
    Marcellus, Nisal, Jayde, Tyler
  • Wehr Nature Center: Tess Creek Corridor Project Expansion
    Anders, Ben, Charles, Matao

Fall 2023

  • Ozaukee Washington Land Trust: Donges Bay Gorge
    Francisco, Gigi, Cal, Adam, Lexi
  • Schlitz Audubon Nature Center: Project Plan
    Izzy, Sophie, Maddie, Clive, Victoria, Sam
  • Wehr Nature Center: The Reinvention of Tess Corners Creek Corridor
    Laura, Maddi, Zoe
  • Riveredge Nature Center: Assessment and Recommendations for Heritage Oaks within a Fen Ecosystem
    Ryan, Griffin, Luke
  • Lynden Sculpture Garden: Stewardship and Restoration Management Plan for Rusty Patched Bumblebees
    Rena, Rebecca, Kristin, Arabella, Xia, Gabrielle

UWM Land Acknowledgement: We acknowledge in Milwaukee that we are on traditional Potawatomi, Ho-Chunk and Menominee homeland along the southwest shores of Michigami, North America’s largest system of freshwater lakes, where the Milwaukee, Menominee and Kinnickinnic rivers meet and the people of Wisconsin’s sovereign Anishinaabe, Ho-Chunk, Menominee, Oneida and Mohican nations remain present.   |   To learn more, visit the Electa Quinney Institute website.