With experts across the WILDLABS community working with every type of technology and in every imaginable environment, our platform is a great place to find advice and resources on choosing what tools are right for your conservation project. Whether you're in the market to try a new camera trap model, want to experiment with drones for the first time, or need help weighing the pros and cons of data management tools, there's someone in the WILDLABS community who can help you make a smart and informed choice!
The Community Base is our general gathering group. It's the place where we cover more general, big picture topics in conservation technology - ones that don't fit neatly into our other groups. If you don't know where to post something, just post it in this group. Our moderators will move it if needed!
At our Community Base, you'll find updates from the WILDLABS team on upcoming events and opportunities, and have the chance to shape our programs and platform with your opinions. And most importantly, the Community Base is also home to our Welcome to WILDLABS thread, the best place to introduce yourself to us and the community. Stop by and tell us what you're working on!
Whether you're new to WILDLABS and want to know where to begin, or you're a longtime member looking for a handy bank of resources, our Getting Started on WILDLABS thread will be your one-stop guide to getting the most out of our platform.
Want to find out more about WILDLABS? Check out our recent community call:
Header image: Ana Verahrami/Elephant Listening Project
Group curators
- @TaliaSpeaker
- | She/her
WILDLABS & World Wide Fund for Nature/ World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
I'm the WILDLABS Research Specialist at WWF-US



- 23 Resources
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- @alexrood
- | she/her
WILDLABS & World Wide Fund for Nature/ World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
I'm the WILDLABS Communications and Community Management Associate Specialist at WWF-US





- 114 Resources
- 78 Discussions
- 7 Groups
BSc Forest Engineering, MSc GIS Sciences, Drone researcher

- 2 Resources
- 11 Discussions
- 5 Groups
Apasionado por la vida en el campo y la electronica aplicada a proyectos de conservacion



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trying to understand and improve the welfare of all animals that can suffer


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University of Antwerp
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- @npeoples
- | she/her/hers
Undergraduate student at UNC-Chapel Hill studying environmental science and journalism



- 4 Resources
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- @amklovrza
- | she / her
Hello! My name is Anabelle Marques Klovrza and I am a Ph.D. student at Dawson's lab. I am studying community assembly of island-like environments, and in trying to connect it with the vulnerability and fragility of the ecosystem.
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I am an environmental enthusiast with great passion for conservation, preservation and protecting the environment and wildlife and the natural resources. With
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University of Salford
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- @HollyCormack
- | she/her
Biodiversity Knowledge Management Intern at the Biodiversity Consultancy Ltd



- 6 Resources
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- @ryanhuang
- | He/Him/His
Conservation scientist based in Pretoria, South Africa
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- 6 Groups
We’re taking a look at past and current submissions that feature the fastest growing areas of conservation tech: movement ecology, AI, aquatic conservation, and bioacoustics. Today’s topic: aquatic conservation!
8 August 2024
We are thrilled to welcome our 3 new Group Leaders for the 2024-2025 term, Bri Johns, Amanda Matthes, and Pen-Yuan Hsing!
8 August 2024
To celebrate our 9th Annual #Tech4Wildlife Photo Challenge happening this week, we’re taking a look at past and current submissions that feature the fastest growing areas of conservation tech: movement ecology, AI,...
7 August 2024
To celebrate our 9th Annual #Tech4Wildlife Photo Challenge starting yesterday, we’re taking a look at past and current submissions that feature the fastest growing areas of conservation tech: movement ecology, AI,...
5 August 2024
The Conservation Leadership Program's Future Conservation Awards calls for proposals from teams of early-career conservationists and targeting at-risk species from the IUCN Red List.
5 August 2024
The Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund ( CEPF ) calls for letters of inquiry ( LOIs ) for both small and large grants. Small grants are between $5K and $50K. Large grants are greater than $50K. Applications can be in...
4 August 2024
The Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund (CEPF) calls for Letters of Inquiry (LOIs) for organizations that address the conservation of biodiversity related to climate change. The budget allows for six to ten awards.
4 August 2024
The Turtle Conservation Fund is currently accepting applications for its grant program that focus on endangered tortoises and freshwater turtles
4 August 2024
Get to know the judges for the 9th Annual #Tech4Wildlife Photo Challenge!
1 August 2024
Black Mammalogists Week 2024 (blackmammalogists.com) will be held Sept. 15-21 and we want to collaborate with conservation tech experts to make our 3rd virtual event a success! If interested, fill out the linked form;...
31 July 2024
Are you an aspiring wildlife conservationist with a passion for apex predators?, BushVeld Biodiversity Research Centre is looking for you!!!
30 July 2024
Human Wildlife Solutions is looking for you!!!. Send your application materials by 15th August 2024.
30 July 2024
May 2025
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Description | Activity | Replies | Groups | Updated |
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India’s unique biodiversity faces specific conservation challenges, necessitating the development of innovative, technology-driven... |
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Community Base, Funding and Finance | 10 months 3 weeks ago | |
Thank you Frank for your comments! And no worries, any pointer to info might lead to something relevant, I will google it through ;-) cheersYanna |
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Community Base | 11 months ago | |
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Community Base, Early Career, East Africa Community | 11 months 1 week ago | ||
Hey @antoineede ,I am not sure about that yet video recordings are available or not but you can visit this: SMART Global Congress 2024 | BluePrismMay be here you will get some of... |
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Protected Area Management Tools, Community Base | 11 months 2 weeks ago | |
Fantastic!! |
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Acoustics, AI for Conservation, Animal Movement, Build Your Own Data Logger Community, Community Base, Early Career, Ethics of Conservation Tech, Marine Conservation, Open Source Solutions | 11 months 2 weeks ago | |
Hi @Frank_van_der_Most thanks for flagging that old/broken link. I have updated it to send to this thread here - https://wildlabs.net/discussion/new-platform-help-troubleshooting-... |
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Community Base | 11 months 2 weeks ago | |
We'll be presenting Wednesday morning as part of session 10.1b on "Integrating earth observations and biological tools in ecology and evolution to cogenerate knowledge towards... |
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Community Base, Animal Movement | 1 year ago | |
I noticed the site being annoyingly slow some time last week. Thank you for clearing that up, for finding the cause and solving the issue.I'm not claiming deep knowledge on AI,... |
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Community Base | 1 year ago | |
Hello Ms Esther👋Thank you for taking your time to reply to me with such helpful response.I'm interested in conservation technology such as camera traps, GIS and Remote sensing,... |
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Early Career, East Africa Community, Community Base | 1 year ago | |
Totally agree.Inititally sceptical until I saw Helena and Graeme were involved.MJ |
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Acoustics, Citizen Science, Community Base, Human-Wildlife Conflict | 1 year 1 month ago | |
Hi @Frank_van_der_Most,great point and I will address this in my little talk next week.Greetings from Austria,Robin |
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Community Base | 1 year 1 month ago | |
@Rob_Appleby follow these instructions to get your Sprout badge! |
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Community Base | 1 year 2 months ago |
A community response to help support the Australian bushfire crisis
4 January 2020 11:01pm
18 February 2020 10:17am
Hi all,
I've put together a short list (below) that I've pulled from the Slack channel related to long term and short term projects that were noted or posted.
It's clear that one need is to identify if a quarterly meeting (to see where various projects are vs start anything new) is needed, or that we see if anyone in the community is able fill a voluntary co-ordination role to check up on various projects. One thing at the back of my mind is to look at this from the perspective that if new fires start at scale what could we have in place, or how could we react. That may drive forward a few ideas and help us to focus on what we can do in the short term as there are plenty of project discussions around physical water feeders etc.
Here's what I got from the Slack channel;
Long term
- Work with Conservation Volunteers Australia to establish projects suitable for volunteers, especially things that can be done remotely, but also out in the field.
- Develop a small but skilled and experienced "brains trust" that can provide input for any environmental project / organisation which needs 'tech smarts' but doesn't have them in house.
Short term
- Australian Citizen Science Association - short term priorities are replacing lost nest boxes and getting more she-oaks in the ground. That has to start happening soon to be useful for the 2020 breeding season (the boxes, not the trees obviously).
- Continue to assess recovery program staff needs and the recovery team's priorities
- Zooniverse want to test ALA data sharing, using air quality data can involve remote volunteers without danger
- Setting up field cameras in burnt areas, to identify remaining wildlife or ferals (Zooniverse, ALA/DigiVol)
- Recording wildlife water point or feed locations and monitoring for maintenance, ie refills. (Kobo, other app?
- Setting up shelter tunnels in burnt areas - and recording locations, with possible addition of field cameras (Zooniverse, ALA/Digivol).
****
2 April 2020 3:35pm
Hello everyone. I hope you're well and your friends and families are safe during the Covid-19 crisis. I know that many of us are out of sync during the shut downs around the world so it isn't the easiest of times to think back on the bush fires, but also at the back of mind is the recurrence again and the recovery still underway / getting ahead of time with solutions. There is however a new opportunity that has come to light. The Australian Government has opened an application form for a $100k - £1m grant, with the desc;
The Wildlife and Habitat Bushfire Recovery Program will provide funding to support the immediate survival and long-term recovery and resilience for fire-affected Australian animals, plants, ecological communities and other natural assets and their cultural values for Indigenous Australians.
This may be the opportunity we need to move forward and progress some of the ideas we all noted. We will need Oz group WildLABS orgs and contacts on the ground, but if feel you have the capacity at this time to support a submission and be a part of it, then get in touch.
Bipod suggestion
28 March 2020 9:31am
COVID19 VIRTUAL HACKATHON, MARCH 26-30
26 March 2020 6:02pm
Is this group still live?
2 January 2019 5:09pm
15 January 2019 5:14pm
Hi,
So I have found out that Zoohackathon may actually happen in June 2019 this year, which is earlier than normal. I'm meeting with the US Embassy w/c 28th Jan and hope to find out more then and will follow up after,
Soph
16 January 2019 6:40pm
Fantastic news. Do keep me updated as I excited to commit to this.
20 February 2020 12:18am
Hello!
I'm new here, so I've missed these past events. I would love to hear about any upcoming hackathons :)
How do we get better at failure?
19 February 2020 12:00am
Embracing Failure Project: Share your experiences
17 February 2020 12:00am
Innovate for Wildlife and People Challenge - Deadline February 24
20 December 2019 6:36pm
31 January 2020 1:06pm
Hi Everyone -
This Innovation Challenge is now open for Project Ideas, so if you are interested please go ahead and read more on the Challenge page here, where you will also find the link to Sign Up as a Project Leader or download a PDF that shows the application template and the background to the challenge.
We really welcome any ideas that fit the challenge description, and if you engage, we will have a chance to also further develop your Project idea during the review phase, based on feedback by a global community of subject-matter experts.
https://impactio.global/innovate-for-wildlife-and-people-challenge
Any questions, I am here! Anna
CAPSULE- World’s Largest Hackathon for Conservation
21 January 2020 1:17pm
내려 anigana.co.kr/sandz/ - 샌즈카지노
16 January 2020 12:15pm
Webinar: The Business of Saving the Planet: Technology, Innovation & Intelligence in Conservation, Jan 7
20 December 2019 4:32pm
Innovate for Wildlife and People: Incentivising and rewarding community-based wildlife conservation
19 December 2019 12:00am
An Engineer’s Experience at International Congress for Conservation Biology (ICCB)
18 November 2019 10:16am
Download the WILDLABS Community Review 2018-19
30 October 2019 12:00am
Dan Pallotta is hosting a complimentary workshop in NYC on Nov 6th for nonprofit board membership engagement.
17 October 2019 3:32pm
An ICCB newbie's experience
10 October 2019 12:32pm
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup Series: Season Three
24 September 2019 10:01am
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup Series – Season 3
5 September 2019 1:04am
2020 Call for CLP Conservation Award funding applications
30 August 2019 12:00am
The future of conservation tech: 5 key discussions
22 August 2019 5:31pm
27 August 2019 12:47pm
Who, who, who?
Steph! Steph! Steph!
27 August 2019 12:51pm
Ha! Not likely. I suspect this might be a little beyond just one person. But I will do my bit to pull the threads together and nudge things along..
27 August 2019 9:24pm
Hi Steph - as a career technologist now looking to see how I can engage my skills and experience in the world of conservation technology, this is pretty interesting review of the state of play right now.
All organisations (commercial, government, not-for-profits, military and other services ) struggle with the question of how and when to deploy technology as part of their overall systems of operation and how then to ensure that they reap the expected benefits. It's not simple, there is rarely if ever a perfect solution of any scope and longevity but of course many organisations do garner very significant beneifts from the efficient use of mainstream technologies and the innovative use of unusual or emerging technologies.
A few quick remarks spring to mind from your notes:
1) The Gartner hype cycle - it's a pretty useful visualisation (much of the latter part of my career was spent trying to guide technologies targeted at large enterprises from the "early adopter" to the "mainstream" stages) and most useful for helping a tech user to decide what kind of user they should be in their current context and where the technologies that are coming under consideration fall on that cycle of maturity. A mismatch ? Then take care ...
2) Conservation tech is not a washing machine - well that depends. I imagine there are a number of different techs and projects and the "washing machine" status will vary. If you know that the tech you NEED to meet your project aims is unproven, don't expect a washing machine level of ease of use ! If you think you're deploying a mainstream tech, then DO expect a "washing machine". As an example, if you buy and deploy a simple camera trap, you expect a good manual (albeit developed for the manufacturer's target market, which may be hunters in the USA) and you expect the device to operate in accordance with the manual. If you're deploying a set of networked sensors that will use AI in real time to detect and interact with animals in the environment - don't expect a smooth ride. In fact in this latter case, proving the technology may be one of the objectives of the study, whereas in the former, the data being collected was the required resource for the study objectives.
3) System engineering and enterprise architecture are the two disciplines that organisation use to try to get their whole tech strategy and execution to work to meet their goals. Done well, it means that the business goals are identified and understood and the allocation of tasks between people and different techs is optimally made for performance and cost effectiveness. It's how to ensure a well balanced overall system and process approach. It's an area that been studied and there are methods for implementing this discipline. In fact, if I then add there are many, many methods for implementation, you may realise that it's a problem that's easily stated and less easily solved, but still is generally better that having a splash on the latest shiny tech and hoping for the best.
4) There will be trends, experiences and best practices that can be shared, but naturally these emerge as technologies mature - nobody knows best practice the first time and innovators will also necessarily face unique challenges. However defining some ontologies or frameworks to help record and structure experiences may very well be worthwhile
Andy
Calling all makers, hackers and tinkerers
23 August 2019 7:33pm
Breaking Bio: A Youtube Platform for Promotion of Diversity in Conservation and Youth Empowerment
20 August 2019 4:45pm
Discussion: 5 Ways To Advance Conservation Entrepreneurship
29 July 2019 6:42pm
29 July 2019 7:15pm
I'll start.
My current thinking is that social-change is impractical to achieve directly. I think that ultimately, we cannot start by depending on human altruism and changing view points because economic issues such as poverty are too prevalent, especially where lots of habitat destruction occurs (Brasil gold mining, illegal logging, unsustainable palm oil farming). Economic incentive must be the primary driver. People must be able to make more money using sustainable approaches than they do with the unsustainable. For that, the sustainable approaches must be more efficient or serve a larger market. I'm not set in this thinking by any means, but it seems to me be a strong viewpoint. It's pure business.
That said, I think conservation efforts should be focused on doing that business development worldwide and one place for biologists would be in ensuring that the production being done is actually sustianable. The kinds of business development might be "clean gold", another example is the Brasil nuts that are produced by an indigenous forest community. How many more businesses like Brasil nuts can we produce? Can we make sustainable wood cheaper/better than unsustainable?
I think the most important issue to address is "How do we choke unsustainable supply chains?"
Virtual Meetup Discussion: Tools and Spaces for Collaboration
8 May 2019 12:55pm
14 May 2019 7:46pm
24 June 2019 2:27pm
Could you enable a download so I can watch while I am offline.
I think zoom have an option to enable the download button.
18 July 2019 10:46pm
Unfortunately, we're not set up to enable download for video recordings at the moment, but we do plan to upload shorter clips of each presentation to YouTube in the near future. We could also potentially make an audio-only version available for download if that would be of interest?
Are you headed to ICCB 2019?
12 July 2019 11:53am
18 July 2019 3:07am
Hi Steph,
Thanks for starting this thread. I'll be at ICCB too. I am presenting on social and organisational aspects of implementing technologies for protected area management and security on Tuesday 23rd at the session starting 11:45. Would love to join the meetups as well!
18 July 2019 3:19am
Yay! Will you also be at the pre-conference short course?
18 July 2019 3:39am
Oh yes I forgot to mention, I will be at the University of Nottingham campus on Saturday too.
Looking for field researchers and conservationists to interview about conservation roadblocks.
5 July 2019 5:13pm
EAZA CONFERENCE - Support Letter from a member (request)
3 July 2019 11:35am
Introducing your new (beta) dashboard
4 July 2018 5:13pm
31 March 2019 10:23am
Hey,
Am a developer, I would be happy to give some feedback and lend you a hand.
The first major suggestion is related to the Typography. The font size are too large on some browsers. Also the embedded fonts doesn't always work on all browser/operating systems, for instance on chromium.
See the attached screenshots below:
Large typeface:
https://pasteboard.co/I7WJtCO.png
Large titles:
https://pasteboard.co/I7WJPZy.png
Some type/icons fail to load
https://pasteboard.co/I7WKsxZH.png
HTH
arky


3 June 2019 5:12pm
Hi everyone,
New functionality for you! We've added in a email option. You can now elect to receive a regular email that summarises new conversations from the groups you're a member of. A lot of people have asked to recieve a notification when new discussion threads are started in your groups. This is our answer to that request, and we hope it offers helpful alerts while avoiding overwhelming your inbox with notifications.
At this stage, we have it set to be sent on the 1st of the month. We can change this to give you more options (e.g. you could elect to get it fortnightly), but while we're testing it we thought it best to keep it simple. This timing should compliment your regular Community Digest that we curate from across the full community -we aim to have this come out in the middle of the month.
To turn this email on, visit your dashboard and click the cogs under your profile image on the left. Go to the 'Privacy & Notifications' tab, and then select the checkbox next to 'Please send me an email summary of the activities in my subscribed groups' (see screenshot attached). You can update your preferences here at any time.
If you want to see any changes (e.g. different timing options?) please let us know!
Stephanie

4 June 2019 1:42pm
Hi Steph and WildLabs team, this is a great idea and I'm liking these added options. I just noticed that when accessing conversations from the Dashboard > My Groups, there's no option on there to 'subscribe to this conversation' or to click onto the original conversation URL to do so.
Thanks for continually innovating!
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup Series – Season 2!
19 February 2019 3:35pm
14 March 2019 3:49am
Hi Steph.
Thanks for the clarification. I had misunderstood and thought it was a call for volunteers to propose potential talks for the virtual meetups. I hadn't realized the speakers were already chosen. Ha ha ha. I will take a look at the previous meetups to understand the format better. Looking forward to the next one and will participate in the discussion :)
Akiba
21 March 2019 2:14pm
And I'd very much like to hear about your ideas!
Mind you, it's not always the case that problem and solution sets overlap. But the more problems and solutions one knows about, the more likely it is to make a match.
Thanks,
-harold
7 May 2019 3:18pm
Hi all,
Reminder that the second event in Season 2 of the series is happing TOMORROW May 8 from 2pm-3:30pm GMT / 10am-11:30am EDT! Note that this is 3pm-4:30pm BST due to daylight savings. The meetup will focus on Tools & Spaces for Collaboration, with contributions from 3 wonderful speakers and 3 innovative makerspaces/field labs. You can still register here to join. For those who are unable to join us live, the meetup will be recorded and shared on the series page within a week of the event.
Hope to see you tomorrow!
Talia
Help requested—verifiable stories where low-tech solutions beats out high-tech
8 April 2019 5:15pm
13 April 2019 10:26pm
One more that just came to mind is the beehive fences that help protect crops and reduce elephant-human conflict. Dr Lucy King will be speaking in just under 2 hours on this topic, live-streamed on the WCN Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/wildnet/
more information on the elephants and bees project:
http://elephantsandbees.com/
17 April 2019 3:07pm
Conservation dogs is a big one, with koala scat dogs being highly successful here in QLD, Aus. I also was at the local dump the other day and I noticed that one of the crew working there was walking around cracking a whip to disperce all the ibis trying to get into the pit. They all seemed to fly away immediately, and he was a good 30m or so from the nearest bird. As this sort of thing is of great interest to me, I approached him and asked a bunch of questions, like, how long does it take them to return, and what other things have you tried? He was really helpful. Basically, the whip along with water sprayers are the only things so far that consistently work to keep the birds away for any length of time. They tried 'loud sound players' (didn't know much more than that) to no avail and the public also complained. I was there a good half an hour talking with him and I didn't see any birds come back into the pit, but he said sometimes it only takes about ten minutes. Other times it can be hours. It's interesting because there's a study showing that macropods didn't habituate to either a whip crack or their own warning stimulus (foot stomp - see: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0014549), so perhaps the whip crack is a little more immune to habituation/desensitization?
17 April 2019 3:19pm
Here's a link to a study about koala scat detection dogs: https://www.nature.com/articles/srep08349?dom=pscau&src=syn and check out Figure 1, which compares difference in time between detections in dogs and humans: https://www.nature.com/articles/srep08349/figures/1
It's hilarious! Literally my favourite box-and-whiskers plot of all time (and yes, I do have a favourite).
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup Recording: Tools & Spaces for Collaboration

17 April 2019 12:00am
13 January 2020 5:02am
Hi Tom,
okay good news, Aaron's been able to track down the designs for you. He's going to drop them in the slack chat - he'll be the person you can ask questions if needed as well.
Steph