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The Wyoming Chapter of The Wildlife Society
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The Wyoming Chapter of The Wildlife Society
About
Mission
Board Meeting Minutes
Special Reports
Leadership Team
Contact
Network
UW Student Chapter
The Wildlife Society
Central Mountains and Plains Section
Opportunities
Get Involved!
Grants
Travel Grants
Awards
Resources
Newsletters
Resource Hub
Annual Conference
2026 Conference Quick Info
Abstract Submission
Venue
Become a member!
Folder: About
Back
Mission
Board Meeting Minutes
Special Reports
Leadership Team
Contact
Folder: Network
Back
UW Student Chapter
The Wildlife Society
Central Mountains and Plains Section
Folder: Opportunities
Back
Get Involved!
Grants
Travel Grants
Awards
Folder: Resources
Back
Newsletters
Resource Hub
Folder: Annual Conference
Back
2026 Conference Quick Info
Abstract Submission
Venue
Become a member!
Name *
Example: Aly B. Courtemanch (1), Anna D. Chalfoun (2), and Riley F. Bernard (3)
Please enter your affiliations in the following format: (1) Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Jackson, WY (2) Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY (3) Zoology and Physiology Department, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY
Please enter your title in sentence case (e.g., Effects of forest management on northern long-eared bat habitat use)
Keywords *
Please check up to three keywords
Please select taxonomic group your research focuses on
200 words maximum. Abstracts should concisely convey the what, why, where, when, and how of the work to be presented. Start with the broader context of the work, the key gap(s) in knowledge that the work addresses, and the importance (2-3 sentences). Explicitly articulate the focal questions/objectives, and any relevant hypotheses and predictions. General approach/methods (2-3 sentences); include just enough information to provide readers a sense for where, when, and how the work was conducted. Results: This is the core of the abstract. Summarize the main findings as they relate to the focal questions/objectives. Do not include summary statistics. Conclusions: End the abstract with a strong summary of what the knowledge gained as a result of the work, and the relevant implications. (2-3 sentences). Note: Abstract submissions (poster) for work under development or in progress need not provide specific methodologies, results, or conclusions. The composition of submissions for the special Wildlife Conservation Stories session may be unique.

Thank you, your abstract has been submitted!

Please see the 2026 call for abstracts here and submit your abstract below!

The Wyoming Chapter of the Wildlife Society

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