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eDNA is a molecular conservation tech tool that can be used to detect species presence in samples taken directly from the environment. To date, eDNA has been used for species detection, biomass estimation, diet analysis, reconstruction of past flora and fauna, and wildlife disease detection. Still a relatively new area of conservation tech, eDNA is in a phase of rapid innovation and growth, with improved ease of use and more accessibility allowing this technology to find new uses in the field and lab.

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Nature Tech for Biodiversity Sector Map launched!

Carly Batist and 1 more
Conservation International is proud to announce the launch of the Nature Tech for Biodiversity Sector Map, developed in partnership with the Nature Tech Collective! 

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Thanks for sharing @carlybatist  and @aliburchard !About the first point, lack of data integration and interpretation will be a bottleneck, if not death blow to the whole...
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Using drone or other unmanned vehicle for DNA sampling on fresh elephant dung in a Baï, Congo Rainforest.

Hi all,Elephant listening project and WWF CAR are working on elephant identification in Dzanga Baï (clearance in the forest) since several years now. We would like to compare our...

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Hi Antoine,

Maybe I am a bit late but stumbled across your post. We have built a system to collect DNA samples from the rainforest with a drone hovering above the canopy, and we lower a probe more than 40 meters down into the canopy. Something similar could be done for your case, and as the drone hovers above, the noise is somewhat reduced. Feel free to reach out if you want to further discuss this!

Hi @skirchgeorg , thanks for the additional info. We discuss again about this with my colleague and we were still hesitating with the drone, as it will still make some noise that will deter elephant away unless we can cover it with a natural sound. And it term of control drone are not the easiest, and some bird will also attack it (already have experience that in similar context). So after discussion we were more thinking about a rover camouflaged in elephant dung or something else, that will be able to bring back a piece of elephant dung for DNA analysis. This rover will only be able to access the dry part of the baï, but it would be easier to control and we could also attach a small rope in case of problems to bring it back to the platform. If you have any ideas to develop this rover, please contact me!
 

 

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eDNA sampling kits

Hi everyone, do you have any recommendations for eDNA sampling kits? I'm currently working on barcoding and genomics research focused on carnivores and bats (Chiroptera...

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eDNA sampling kits

Hi all,  I am trying to find simple pre-assembled eDNA sampling kits like these below but for sale in North America. Is that available? Or only as part of an assay?...

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Thesis Collaboration

Hello everyone, I am an experienced Data Scientist and I am currently studying a second master in Environment Management (ULB - Belgium). I am currently looking for a master...

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Hi Simon,
Did you already contact INBO? Both biologging and citizen science are big themes at INBO. Last year we had a master thesis on camera trapping invasive muntjac. You can send me a private message for more info!

Hi Simon,

We're a biologging start-up based in Antwerp and are definitely open to collaborate if you're interested. We've got some programs going on with local zoo's. Feel free to send me a DM if you'd like to know more.

Hi Simon,
We (Reneco International Wildlife Consultants) have an ongoing collaboration with a local University (Abu Dhabi, UAE)  for developing AI tools (cameratrap/drone images and video analyses) and biomimetic robots applied to conservation (e.g  https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1574954124004813 ). We also have a genetic team working on eDNA.    Field experience could be possible, in UAE or Morocco.
Feel free to write me back if you may be interested and would like to know more
 

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A question about nanopore sequencing analysis

Hello, I am from Indonesia, and currently, I am researching the eDNA technique using nanopore sequencing to detect several marine taxonomic. Do you know how to reduce...

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Not an expert here, but when I used this a few years back we initially used the guppy process to do real-time base calling as the nanopore was sequencing, but found that we were better off waiting for the sequencing to finish and then reprocessing all the output using the slow and careful option of the guppy base-calling process (which was way to slow to do effective real-time calling). 

Hi Chris Yesson, 

Thank you for your response and answer. Yaps, in my experience with Guppy, we need to increase the model to get better results. However, When I used Dorado for basecalling, it was more appropriate with the result than a Guppy. Also, I found a journal about Porechop_ABI that could minimize unclassified barcodes because of the non-read adapters. 

This is a journal : Porechop_ABI: discovering unknown adapters in Oxford Nanopore Technology sequencing reads for downstream trimming | Bioinformatics Advances | Oxford Academic

Best Regards, 

Hi Muhammed,

If you want any help with ONT please contact me

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Coupling remote sensing and eDNA to monitor environmental impact: A pilot to quantify the environmental benefits of sustainable agriculture in the Brazilian Amazon

The authors used the Continuous Degradation Detection and LandTrendr to map forest disturbance and regeneration, carbon sequestration and changes in habitats. This was coupled with eDNA from soil samples from intervention and counterfactual pasture field sites.

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Integrating Satellite Data with on-the-ground conservation tech

Hi All - I'm new to WILDLABS. I'm Seamus, I work at Planet on our impact and sustainability team, focusing on applications of our satellite data to biodiversity. We've seen...

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Hi, Seamus—welcome to WILDLABS! 

I work on building ground and sea-truthing technologies for satellite remote sensing related to conservation tech. For example, we have used data collected from Smartfins (thermometers on surfboard fins) to validate Landsat TIRS thermal data and other low-cost tech such as mini- and sensing Secchi disks to evaluate satellite ocean color data. I don't work in conservation tech in the strictest sense (more accurate to say coastal water resources/resilience), but of course it's related, so thought I'd chime in. 

https://aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/lom3.10624https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0272771421004996

Sounds like a great position at Planet, and an important pursuit—good luck, and I hope our paths cross!

Hi Phil, 

Thanks for sharing - this is really interesting work! 

Seems like a cool integration of ground-based (or ocean-based) data and satellite data, with a community science aspect as well. I look forward to giving this paper a full read. 

Thanks, 
Seamus

 

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AI accelerator for nonprofits working in the Climate area

Hello everyone! I'm here today to share an interesting opportunity with you! As part of the Tech To The Rescue team, I am thrilled to unveil our latest transformative initiative!...

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Thank you so much! Now everything is in the hands of amazing organizations and companies! But the first results of the Disaster Management cohort are bringing a very optimistic vision! :) I hope for the same in the Climate cohort!

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New WILDLABS Funding & Finance group

WildLabs will soon launch a 'Funding and Finance' group. What would be your wish list for such a group? Would you be interested in co-managing or otherwise helping out?

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This is great, Frank! @StephODonnell, maybe we can try to bring someone from #Superorganism (@tomquigley ?) or another venture company (#XPRIZE) into the fold!
I find the group to be dope, fundraising in the realm of conservation has been tough especially for emerging conservation leaders. There are no centralized grants tracking common...
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Introducing The Inventory!

The Inventory is your one-stop shop for conservation technology tools, organisations, and R&D projects. Start contributing to it now!

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Hi @hjayanto ! I've given your account the ability to edit without earning the badge just to save time while we figure out why you aren't getting your Sprout Badge, so you should...
Thank you @JakeBurton . Looks like I wasn't in community base group, instead misunderstood it was the same as thematic group. I have added our organization. Appreciate your help!
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eDNA Collaborative: Small Grants Application for Marine eDNA Research

The eDNA Collaborative is partnering with Experiment to offer $80,000 in small grants to support projects that demonstrate novel approaches in marine eDNA collection, analysis, or application. Submission Deadline: March 30, 2024

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