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Header image: Laura Kloepper, Ph.D.

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Machine learning, meet the ocean

There is a revolution coming in conservation. Advances in conservation technology are generating more data than ever before on what lives where, who eats who, and what’s disappearing and how fast, but it still requires...

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Getting SMART in Cambodia

In 2016, Cambodia reached a landmark for marine conservation when a 405 km2 Marine Fisheries Management Area was declared around the islands of Koh Rong and Koh Rong Sanloem, creating the country’s first large-scale...

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discussion

PIT tag suppliers in the UK

Hi all,  Does anyone have any recommendations for PIT tag (+ reader) suppliers in the UK?  I've used Francis Scientific Instruments before - a very small...

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Hi Kai - I asked for a UK supplier, but thanks.

Hi everyone -

I had a recommendation for http://www.wyremicrodesign.co.uk/. Apparently used successfully for a couple of projects, and designed/built some bespoke readers. The owner can be contacted on phil.rycroft@wyremicrodesign.co.uk.

I went with Francis Scientific Instruments in the end, as they've been reliable and helpful on past projects. You can contact Mike (Francis) on fsilog@btconnect.com.

Cheers, Ollie

Hi Ollie,

Thank you for the update! This will be of use to other community members!

 

-John

Not been on Wildlabs for a long time but I recommend Eccel Technology in Leicester and even build them into bird rings. We have been using theirs.

RSPB have built a data logger around the Arduino and plan to put the design and code on Wildlabs sometime later in the year. There are many commercially available and cheap means of solely reading PIT or as they also known RFID tags.

Thanks

Nigel

 

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discussion

UAV for surveying river dolphins in the Amazon

Monitoring river dolphins in the Amazon is expensive and time consuming. Because of that there is a scarce understanding about their abundance and distribution. Our study aimed at...

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Hi Marcelo,

To improve autonomy, you'll either need less weight on your drone, better batteries, or what about a fixed wing aircraft? Look at the parrot disco - it's much cheaper than the eBee, and you can outfit it with a downward facing camera instead of the forward, though it seems from your video, the one it has is fine). Those things can fly much longer than copters.

 

best,

aurélie

 

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discussion

Using social media to survey exotic pet owners

Hi All, I'm currently completing my masters project and I'm looking at reducing demand amongst exotic pet owners. I'm thinking of using social media to assess the...

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Thanks @StephODonnell for the mention, 

Our study (TRAFFIC) has shown that the social media used is really dependent on the country. Some countries prefer Facebook, other Instagram, there are other options such as WeChat and Blackberry Messenger, but these require more private access. 

Another issue is the language, you will get more in the local language of each country compared to English. This is something that has been overlooked. 

But if you want to use Facebook and Instagram, you already have a lot of going on and a big story there. I would suggest that as the easiest and most accessible one. 

We found that manual surveys (Taking screenshots and manually entering data into excel) is good to get a general idea of what is going on, but not effective to capture information such as market turn over, or how much increase/ decrease in demand and offer there is. 
Many groups that work in data mining and machine learning have also come up with methods to automatically extract data. I know a group in NYU is even developing an app to monitor the online market: https://news.mongabay.com/wildtech/2016/10/egi-filling-in-the-gaps-in-law-enforcement-for-the-online-wildlife-trade/

Just a little note from me, is to ensure that you are also taking into considerations privacy matters when you publish. It is still not clear on the regulations of how to use data uploaded in social media. And it's also country specific on the legal aspects of that. 

Anyway, I am more than happy to talk more if you need to. PM me if needed and we can chat more 

Hope this helps


Karlina

Lindsey,

You might also want to consider WeChat as a key channel. I know that it is very commonly used to trade wildlife in China and Vietnam. It is more of a texting service, however, so I'm not sure if that would be in the scope.

Rosemary

Just to clarify, you mean illegal owners of exotic animals or legal owners? I'm assuming illegal because you reference wildlife crime, but in a lot of countries there are large amounts of legal domestically traded wildlife. It might be kind of difficult to get illegal traders to take the survey, but legal traders might be more receptive.

 

-John

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discussion

Biodesign - using pheromones & tech to curate future ecosystems

Hi all, My team and I are from Imperial College and the Royal College of Art, and we've been working on a concept as part of the Biodesign Challenge - envisaging future...

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Hi. Personally, I like the idea of number 1. It could also be useful for catching invasive species such as lionfish, or maybe it could also act as a lure for them. Could species over time adapt to the presence of the phermones though? 

The third point sounds like a GMO and it's one thing when it's being proposed for crops, but it's another when it comes to wild species. That could forever alter the gene pool, similar to the debate over the farming of GMO salmon in proximity to wild populations. 

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discussion

CCF GIS Group Social

It's that time again; on Thursday 13th we'll be heading to The Eagle on Benet Street from 18:00 to talk maps. This informal social event is for people with an...

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The next social is on Thursday 27th - same details as above. Hope to see you there!

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Aerial seeding with drones

Hi All, I just would like to share a video with some experiments that we made some years ago with aerial seeding from drones and massive seed ball production: https://www....

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This is really fascinating! This could also be potentially useful as a way to distribute vaccines for wildlife and livestock! 

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discussion

Job opening!

Post-doctoral Researcher or PhD student with a background in data/computer science to work with me on issues around illegal wildlife trade on social media. Please read...

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discussion

Education to combat wildlife crime

I am curretnly starting a masters program focusing ont eh use of education and trianing initiatives being used to combat poaching and smuggling in communiities around the world,...

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@StephODonnell Good to hear from you, and thanks for drawing my attention to this question!

Hi Chris,

As Steph is mentioning, as Ranger Campus Foundation we aim to strengthen law enforcement in protected areas, by focusing on ranger training. We are developing an e-learning platform (Ranger Academy) and acconpanying training modules specifically targeted to the needs of rangers. The content is based on the training guidelines that were written by the big players in the field and were just made public:

http://d2ouvy59p0dg6k.cloudfront.net/downloads/anti_poaching_training_guidelines___electronic_version.pdf 

Main advantages of Ranger Academy are:

- Combine e-learning with physical training and shorten the time you spend on basic level training. This enables instructors to make better use of their time when on the ground.

- Rangers can access their personal e-learning environment when they have time for it - no internet is required for following lessons. So no need to take people off patrols.

- Rangers can communicate with other rangers around the world and lessons in all modules are given by rangers.

- Managers have more insight in ranger competence levels and certificates acquired.

This turned into quite a story so will leave it at that. Let me know if there is anything I could assist with.

Best wishes,

Dominique

P.S. Attaching a picture of the filming of the Care under Fire module last month, where Joseph is demonstrating the correct use of a tourniquet. Picture copyright of Cees Baardman.

Hi Chris, 

@StephODonnell thanks for the heads up on this question!

United for Wildlife have an free online course https://learn.unitedforwildlife.org/ which has an "Introducing Conservation" lesson which covers conservation basics.

Over this year we're (for transparency - I work on the project) releasing a new series of Insights on specific areas of conservation. 

So far we've released "Species and Spaces" and "Worth More Alive" insights - the latter is focussed on the Illegal wildlife trade.

We're also releasing a  series of films called "Natures Guardians" which focus on the Southern African Wildlife College and cover some of the aspects of ranger training. You can view these on our YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLH4rBFGCnvow7YQe3ycwWJ3mVR2MAwuIu  or Facebook page

Thanks!

Peter, thanks for your reply and sorry for the dealyed repsonse, I have been ahving some issues getting alerts in my email.  I would like to talk to you more about your trafficking courses, especially who you have identified as your target audience and what the model was that these courses were designed aorund.  

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discussion

Anti-Corruption Resource Center Brief on Technology for NRM

Group members may find the attached brief of interest by the Anti-Corruption Resource Center on "Digitizing the landscape: Technology to improve integrity in natural...

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Thanks for sharing this Rachel.  

There is some great technology in here and some fantastic ideas.  I like the use of AI to create patroling routes that are more likely to catch poachers.

One thing the article doesn't seem to address directly is the challenge created by corrupt officials explicitly blocking the use of technology, prefering instead to keep records "off the the books." Is this potentially a problem?

In some of the more sensitive bio-diversity regions, social media is only so accessible, and digitization not only cost money, it requires explicit acceptance "on the ground."   I don't have any answers, unfortunately.  Maybe the ideas presented here can start circumventing some of the corruption, but until we can find a way to make sure that the governments, and officials, and local populations all see greater economic benefit from co-existing with biodervisity than through the exploitation of it, the challenge will continue.

Thanks, @Drue+Freeman . You raise excellent points, here. In my experience with projects that use protected area monitoring and management software such as the Spatial Monitoring and Reporting Tool (SMART Conservation Software), transparency is enhanced and the influence of special interests/corruption can be reduced. But for robust results, it is importnat to move beyond pilots and encourage the adoption of a single system on a national level, throughout a country's parks, protected areas and (where appopriate) community-managed areas. Securing this kind of commitment requires robust funding and active engagement of government. 

 

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discussion

GPS wildlife tracking on the cheap

Hi everyone, Should this be of interest, please see our how to on making a cheap GPS device https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaSvS0grVjw The paper here https://euanritchie....

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Hi Colin,

In short yes, they make a GSM device. The issue would be weight. What is the weight limit/minimum recording time? Best off firing further questions at Blake Allan, he knows a lot more than me! bmallan@deakin.edu.au

All the best,

Euan

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discussion

CCF GIS Group Social

It's that time again; on Thursday 13th we'll be heading to The Eagle on Benet Street from 18:00 to talk maps. This informal social event is for people with an...

0
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discussion

QGIS UK Midlands & East User Group meeting

This is the first QGIS (Midlands & East) user group meeting on Thursday 18th May in Cambridge. Tickets are free thanks to the sponsors - British Antartic Survey. Thu 18 May...

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This meeting will now be followed by the Missing Maps May Mapathon - Cambridge from 18:00 - 20:30, which will also be hosted at the British Antarctic Survey. We also plan to squeeze in a post-mapping drink at The Punter just down the road. Open source GIS followed by humanitarian mapping, followed by free pizza and a pint - what more could you ask for!?

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discussion

Missing Maps April Mapathon - Cambridge

Join us for another evening of mapping (and pizza!). No previous experience required.  On Wednesday 5th April from 6pm-8:30pm, we are hosting a...

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Hi Steph,

It was fantastic! We had a full house, with all 40 tickets sold out and really good attendance rate. We were mapping an area of Zimbabwe for the Clinton Health Access Initiative's malaria program. We were joined remotely by some collaborators at OpenStreetMap Bangladesh, and together we completed > 70% of the task. The next Cambridge Missing Maps is going to be at the British Antarctic Survey on Thursday 18th May and you can register here! We hope to include the David Attenborough Building on the Missing Maps Cambridge circuit for future events. The Cambridge Conservation Forum GIS Group are also planning to hold a MapforEnvironment event in the very near future, which will of course be advertised on WILDLABS.NET!

Thanks!

Sounds awesome! Will you be working to finish the other 30% at the next meeting, or working on a new project? 


Adding in a great photo you posted from the event on Twitter last night :) 

Thanks for adding the photo from the event. Missing Maps is becoming really popular, so tasks get completed quite quickly. We shared the task numbers for people to finish off at home if they wanted to, but by the time of next month's mapping party, this task will long have been completed so we'll be working on another one! I hope you can make it on Thursday 18th May.

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event

SCCS Bengaluru 2017 in Bengaluru, India

The Student Conference on Conservation Science - Bengaluru will be held in Bengaluru, India from September 21st to the 24th, 2017. This conference will feature over 500 of Africa and Asia's most innovative and inspiring...

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discussion

Comparing two sound wave files - for a conservation game

Hello sound experts We in the conservation games area are working on a game idea that would require the ability to compare two sound waves (no more than 3 seconds each) and see...

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Dynamic Time Warping is often used as a foundation.

Hey Gautam!

Could you share few sample files? I want to try out a couple algorithm and see if that's useful to you.

Thanks,

Bhavesh

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discussion

Heat Maps

We have been playing with heat mapping incubators. Traditionally yo map an icubator by placing a therometer in different locations within the incubator. This is at best a slow and...

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Hi @AdamBloch 

I'd like to know more about your setup. I'm monitoring temperatures on a nature reserve using an array of 100 iButton Thermocron temperature sensors. I'm interested in what the benefits of using Arduino and Raspberry Pi might be. I need to collect my sensors in and read through a USB device. Then there's the interpolation and plotting of the data, and I'm particularly interested in how you are filtering and querying your data i.e. 'selectable [time?] range'.

Thanks

Hi Thomas

We are mapping a very small area in real time. The data rate is controlled by the time it take to read all the DS18B20s. The logger I use in the Octogons is using about 90 sensors and refreshes about every 5 to 15 seconds. The data is store as a CSV in series of files.

Best thing to do is drop me a PM and your number.

Many thanks

Adam

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