Northeast Wilderness Trust Awards $50,000 in Grant Funding to Support Wilderness Research
MONTPELIER—Northeast Wilderness Trust announced today that five research projects will receive grant funding as part of a pilot of the organization’s new Wildlands and Ecology Research Network (WREN). The chosen projects will all investigate natural processes and dynamics in wild, unmanaged forests across the Northeast.
“WREN is designed to help close a gap in ecological research,” said Shelby Perry, Wildlands Ecology Director at Northeast Wilderness Trust. “Most academic studies about forests take place in places where natural processes and natural communities are subject to persistent human influence such as logging. We understand comparatively little about what goes on in unmanaged forests, where Nature enjoys a greater degree of freedom. With WREN funding, these five projects will play a role in giving wilderness a seat at the academic table.”

The five selected projects represent WREN’s inaugural cohort. The grant program, spearheaded by the Wilderness Trust’s Wildlands Ecology team, was created in late 2025. After fielding research proposals for several months in the first half of 2026, Wildlands Ecology staff identified five projects to receive $10,000 each in financial support.
The selected projects are diverse in subject matter but will all use unmanaged forests as their settings. One will evaluate the status of sensitive avian communities in Maine’s spruce-fir forests. Another will survey the distribution and uses of tree cavities, critical nesting habitat for a variety of wildlife species. The others ask questions about hydrological and climate resilience, old-growth complexity, and long-term trends in fungal communities on the Northeast’s wildlands, or permanently protected places where Nature controls the ebb and flow of life.
“WREN is enabling us to investigate how unmanaged forests regulate water and carbon cycling, two processes that are increasingly critical for climate resilience,” said Dr. Rongyun Tang of North Carolina State University, the principal investigator of one of the chosen projects. “By supporting our pilot work at Howland Research Forest in Maine, WREN is providing a unique opportunity to map these dynamics for the first time, generating knowledge that can inform carbon accounting, flood management, and ecosystem stewardship for land managers and communities across the Northeast.”
WREN will support external researchers and create a network of scholars committed to demystifying wilderness for academic and popular audiences. The program’s creation comes amid a reduction in public research funding, helping to shore up the ecological research that informs everything from environmental policymaking and land-management decisions to societal support for wilderness.
Researchers leading the five selected projects will work with Northeast Wilderness Trust to communicate their findings upon the completion of the studies. Contingent upon the availability of funds, the Wilderness Trust plans to hold future WREN funding rounds. Interested researchers should follow the organization’s email newsletter and social media channels to receive updates. Those wishing to support wilderness research via a donation to WREN may contact Anna Dundas, Development Director, at anna@newildernesstrust.org.




