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Animal Movement / Feed

Animal movement technologies are revolutionizing our understanding of wildlife, revealing insights like migration patterns, key corridors, and the impacts of mounting pressures on natural systems. As we continue to develop these tools and work toward translating movement data into actionable insights, coordination between efforts is essential. This group is a place for the animal movement community to connect and discuss our efforts to advance the field.

discussion

Pangolin Tagging Challenges

Hi! I'm looking for information on Pangolin transmitters or sensors, the basics to start off with. What information is gathered specific to this species or what are the...

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Hi,

Icoteq are launching a new range of small tags that would be ideal for pangolin tracking!

Called TagRanger, the technology incorporates a LoRaWAN based tag with built in sensors and GPS.  It also features a ranging solution giving you your distance to the tag when within range <150m - ideal for finding something which is well hidden as you can navigate your way to the tag until it's within touching distance!

The user carries a small handheld 'Finder' device that acts as a LoRaWAN gateway paired to a mobile phone for live mapping (on and offline maps) and ranging functions.

Size is limited by your preferred battery size, but could be as small as 32mm x 38mm x15mm with a 400mAh battery.

Production units available beginning of September, happy to do demos and trials with prototypes now!

Please feel free to contact me for more information.

 

Hi! 

We have been working with Save Vietnam's Wildlife to track Pangolins for a couple of years now. You can read our Case Study here: 

 

 

We also documented the project and spoke with Save Vietnam's Executive Director about the challenges of tracking Pangolins - here is the video: 

They used the Telenax pangolin tags (15g) during our project which worked great with our drone-based telemetry system and were able to receive signals from a long distance. Feel free to reach out if you have any questions, we are always happy to discuss tracking projects!

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GPS collars are helping save Sumatra’s last wild elephants

Rimba Satwa Foundation (RSF), an Indonesian elephant conservation NGO, is employing GPS collars on elephants to mitigate human-elephant conflicts. RSF aims to enhance collar usage, surveillance, and automation for sustained effectiveness in the long run.

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Filter Last X Positions

Filter Last X Locations - is a new super simple but super powerful moveapp. https://moveapps.org/apps/browser/ebe11063-fd98-4d8d-a22d-f143ec434b6f I will be using this to send me the latest positions of all active muskox collars via low bandwidth email while in the field (...

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Animal tracking stories

Do you have a wild animal tracking story that involves adventure or misadventure? Share it with us! From going around in circles for hours to discovering predators instead of your...

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discussion

Email Alerts via Moveapps

Using Movepps, I set up an email alert to check the tag voltage of deployed GPs collars and alert me if the fall under a threshold.We are using Vectronic collars and although they...

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Collar Tracking vs. Camera Traps for Monitoring Mexican Wolves

This article compares and contrasts the success of their wolf monitoring efforts with both collars and camera traps. The camera traps were intended to help researchers identify individual wolves within the population, but they experienced difficulties identifying both uncollared...

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Real-time Animal Location Data Sources?

Hello All,I'm pretty new to WILDLABS and have really enjoyed the last two Variety Hours.I just started a PhD in creative technology & design at ATLAS Institute, University of...

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Thanks for the link, Amanda. That Shark page looks great. Very good point on temporal resolution and the burden of overhead of sending data in real-time, I hadn't really considered that.

In addition to those noted, you can try the Animal Telemetry Network  

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discussion

Margo Luminous Update: Next Phase BETA Release

Hi Folks,  We have been quietly working on a new offering in wildlife tracking collars. After four years of development and testing we have a single-housing iridium...

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Spring is our busiest time of year and we are also in the middle of an expansion currently so they may not be able to respond. Will ask when they are prepping for variety hour.

Hi Lars,

I can chime in to answer some of your questions. 

1. The web portal is here. This is only a basic placeholder while we work on a better system with login security and 2 way comms. 

https://margosupplies.com/us-en/luminous/

Send me a PM to see one our test Elk in Jackson, Wyoming.  

2. Our data is always transmitted sequentially, oldest samples first. 

3. Currently our staff must do any remote reprogramming, just send us an email. This feature will be part of the new web portal.

4. Iridium allows up to 340 bytes per SBD transmission. Each sample is 17 bytes so we can fit 20 samples per transmission. With good signal we can clear out a backlog of data almost immediately. 

5. Currently no geofencing or alerts but that is on the road map. 

6. As Brett stated. 

7. As Brett stated we are not going to support traditional VHF since this has caused many problems with poachers and wildlife photographers finding the animals. We are developing our own 900MHz LoRa based system which will securely transmit the devices location.This will be released in the form of a USB doggle with antenna that can be plugged into an Android device.

In regard to your questions about accelerometer and Doppler shift.

We have an onboard accelerometer sampling at 50Hz and currently this information is fed into a human calibrated pedometer algorithm. Currently it gives us a rough indicator of how busy the animal is. This sensor could be repurposed based on customer needs. 

Every time an iridium device transmits information, the receiving satellite records a rough position based on doppler effect from the signal. This gives you a backup geo-location with accuracy in the kilometer range. If you use the above tool and click download CSV you can see this information. 

Happy to answer any more questions. 

Hi Jackson @MargoJack!

Thanks a lot for answering these questions.

Looks like you have a very interesting product!

Interesting point you raise with VHF beeing intercepted by poachers etc.

Would there be sufficient memory to log accelerometer data at something like 8Hz on-board the collar for later inference of behaviours?

Will you make versions for other LoRa frequency regions?

Cheers,

Lars

 

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discussion

Field testing of a radio telemetry system to be deployed in the sea.

Hello everyoneWhat kind of tests do you put aquatic tags through to get them field ready? Currently, we are testing a radio telemetry system. We are leaving the tags at 20...

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Oh, great link! Been doing marine projects recently and a big headache is protecting submerged electronics. I've kind of heard of many of those techniques, but great to see them collected all in one place and with first hand experienced commentary regarding them. 

Not sure exactly how your telemetry will be deployed, but if it's going to be attached to an animal in a relatively non-invasive way, you might check with zoos or aquariums that have similar species. 

I worked in that industry for a long time and we tested telemetry for seals, sea lions, polar bears and elephants. There might have been more, but that's all I can think of off the top of my head. This can help improve attachment methods and test how tough the animals will be on the equipment. 

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discussion

Wing-tags with trackers attached?

Hi all, We want to better understand the population movements of the bird species, Little Corellas, in South Australia. We are wanting to attach a tracking device that...

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Thanks Thomas! 

I haven't found any wing-tag avian trackers like I described. Although, similar models have been made for terrestrial animals in the form of ear tags. 

I am inquiring as to whether a lighter version can be made for birds. Although an obvious concern is the weight of the tracker since the wellbeing of the bird is our priority. 

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