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Otto: Nature Nerds gather at Wild Things

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Visitors came from miles around to last week’s Wild Things conference. (Photo provided)

Hands down, the outdoors is the best place to learn about nature and things wild. But sometimes, time spent indoors can be enlightening, too.

Last Saturday was Wild Things, an all-indoor biennial conference described in promotional materials as “organized by Audubon Chicago Region in cooperation with the Habitat Project, the Volunteer Stewardship Network, and Chicago Wilderness through funding from the USDA Forest Service and US Fish & Wildlife Service.”

Which is a fancy way of saying that Nature Nerds and EcoGeeks came from miles around to renew old friendships, make new ones, network, bond, commiserate and learn, all within the mostly friendly confines of the University of Illinois-Chicago’s Student Center East.

The day began at 9 a.m. with concurrent keynote addresses on the importance of stitching together our greenspace and natural areas, along with a fascinating description of how wildlife is evolving around us. The 1,100-plus registrants were then turned loose to sit in on any of 89 30- and 45-minute breakout sessions, spaced throughout the day and interspersed with visits to the Wild Things exhibit hall and an extra-long lunch hour with book signings, poster sessions and more.

The result was an event filled with hour after hour of Gee Whiz! and Who Knew?!

Here’s a sampling of the sort of prime knowledge nuggets the St. Charles Park District attendees took back to our home base at Hickory Knolls:

Researchers at Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie are giving birding a run for its money. They have produced a gorgeous four-color publication, “Spider Watching at Midewin,” that details the habits and life cycles of a dozen different spider families that live within the 19,000-acre preserve – as well as most of northeastern Illinois. My favorite fact there? Male spiders use many strategies to woo their mates, including drumming, web strumming and silken nuptial gifts, and every single one of them are designed to persuade and pacify the female. (Nice work, lady spiders!)

Check out the 30-page Spider Watching brochure at www.fs.usda.gov/midewin.

As if white nose syndrome wasn’t enough to contend with, North American bats who survive this devastating fungal disease now have to contend with immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome – an equally injurious condition whereby the bats’ own immune systems slip into overdrive, attacking not only the fungus but also the bats’ wing tissue, making it difficult, if not impossible, to fly.

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