Steven Gray, PhD
Assistant Unit Leader - Michigan Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
I received my masters (2012) in Fisheries and Wildlife from Michigan State University, where I conducted research on small mammal community response to forest management in northern California. Following my masters, I obtained a dual-PhD (2019) in Fisheries and Wildlife and Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior from Michigan State University. My dissertation focused on the spatial ecology and impact of a low-density wild pig (Sus scrofa) population in Michigan. Following my graduate training, I held post-doctoral positions in the Alexander Center for Applied Population Biology at Lincoln Park Zoo and in the Applied Forest and Wildlife Ecology Laboratory at Michigan State University. I officially joined the Michigan Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit as Assistant Unit Leader in 2024. I have broad research interests that span a diversity of taxa and systems but specialize in non-invasive monitoring tools and spatial and quantitative techniques. My research is highly applied and catered to address the pressing conservation and management challenges identified by cooperators.
*Disclaimer: Listing outside positions with professional scientific organizations on this Staff Profile are for informational purposes only and do not constitute an endorsement of those professional scientific organizations or their activities by the USGS, Department of the Interior, or U.S. Government