Stephanie Johnson isn't a gamer. She rarely racks up much screen time.
But lately, the elementary school teacher from Minnetrista has been glued to her laptop, muttering "just one more" with the same fervid intensity that she imagines video games inspire.
The reason? Scientists have amassed more than 1 million photos of Minnesota wildlife over the past year, and they are putting out the call for volunteers and armchair naturalists like Johnson to help sift through them. Researchers say the images capture the kinds of secret moments in animals' lives that humans rarely see.
Since Johnson started clicking through photos over her Christmas break, she's helped classify about 1,600 images.
"I literally was hooked," said Johnson, 50.
For decades, scientists have studied plant diversity at Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve, a University of Minnesota research station that straddles Anoka and Isanti counties.
Now researchers at the 5,500-acre site want to better understand the wildlife hidden in Cedar Creek's forests, grasslands and oak savannas, adding to their deep body of existing research.
The "Eyes on the Wild" project makes use of more than 100 trail cameras scattered throughout Cedar Creek, one of the best-studied ecosystems in the world. Triggered by motion and heat, the grid of cameras has been snapping photos of animals great and small since late 2017, capturing critters ranging from wolves and bison to owls.