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
- 62 Discussions
- 25 Groups
- @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
- @cwcline
- | him/his
Panthera
Conservation technologist and hardware developer with Panthera


- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 2 Groups
- @raquelgo
- | (she/her/hers)
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 17 Groups
- @ThinkNature
- | TN
We, at Think Nature, are a university-launched startup that aims to transform into a nature economy where humans and nature coexist.


- 0 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 2 Groups
- @evan21
- | She/Her
University of St Andrews
Final Year Biology & Geography Undergraduate at the University of St Andrews
- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 7 Groups
Software Engineer


- 0 Resources
- 5 Discussions
- 10 Groups
American Museum of Natural History
- 1 Resources
- 8 Discussions
- 10 Groups
- @Tracks_Ecology
- | he/him
Ecological Consultant focussing on the use of UAV and GIS to advance applied ecological reasearch
- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 5 Groups
Fauna & Flora
Countering poaching and IWT

- 0 Resources
- 6 Discussions
- 2 Groups
- @bradnahill
- | he / him
SEE Turtles
Brad has worked in sea turtle conservation & ecotourism for 20+ years. He is the lead writer of Sea Turtle Research and Conservation and co-author of the Worldwide Travel Guide to Sea Turtles. He has won the President's Award from the International Sea Turtle Society.
- 1 Resources
- 4 Discussions
- 6 Groups
- @ZoeDagan
- | She/her
I'm Zoe, an ecologist at the intersection of SaaS, conservation, and community science. I build programs and advance projects that accelerate solutions to our most urgent climate and conservation challenges.

- 0 Resources
- 4 Discussions
- 10 Groups
- @crazybirdguy
- | Him
Field Biologist at Yayasan Cikananga Konservasi Terpadu, Indonesia, with experience and interest mainly in ornithology, citizen science and bioaccoustic
- 0 Resources
- 9 Discussions
- 12 Groups
FruitPunch AI
CTO and Founder of FruitPunch AI




- 0 Resources
- 4 Discussions
- 11 Groups
We are developing a project in Thailand, using drones to locate lost & discarded fishing gear across Koh Phangan, Thailand. We're 86% there & only need $1500 to get us over the line. If you can help us, we...
18 December 2022
How can you connect with the #tech4wildlife community outside of social media? WILDLABS has everything you need!
1 December 2022
The two organizations will receive a no-strings-attached grant of $15,000 to help accelerate their plans to leverage technology in order to safeguard wildlife and their habitats across the globe.
9 November 2022
A new issue of our community digest just went out! Check it out to discover a big platform update, and a summary of all the latest content from across WILDLABS in one easy to scan place!
4 November 2022
This SPACES paper aims to inspire the audience to use spatial intelligence as an enabler for integrated nature and climate action. It showcases ’emerging’ data sources and digital technology in the nature and climate...
28 October 2022
Within the open-access Learning Hub, you can find interactive e-learning courses and recordings of online training webinars; all are original and completely free to access. Includes Good Fund Management, Conflict...
25 October 2022
Apply now for $2,500–$15,000 USD grants for early-stage ideas or projects that address global challenges.
4 October 2022
Funding
The Activate Fellows supported by NSF will be scientists & engineers from a variety of backgrounds & regions across the U.S. who will translate research breakthroughs to new products & services with broad...
26 September 2022
Our latest WILDLABS Community digest has just hit inboxes! Don't have time to keep up with everything that's happening in the conservation tech world? This email is for you!
23 September 2022
Last year, WILDLABS published the first global, community-sourced assessment of the State of Conservation Technology, which evolved from our annual community survey. Take the 2022 survey to help us build from this...
14 September 2022
Community Announcement
Our annual #Tech4Wildlife Photo Challenge is a weeklong celebration of our community and all the exciting and innovative ways you’re using conservation tech in your work. This week, take a photo, share it on Twitter...
6 September 2022
Get to know Alyssa Bohart, our first WILDBEAR Award recipient, who works with GPS-collared bears in Canada.
22 July 2022
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Description | Activity | Replies | Groups | Updated |
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Welcome! How are you getting on with your game studio? |
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Community Base | 6 years 6 months ago | |
Hello, The FFI Liberia team is reaching out for contact details of small mammal specialists for a field consultancy (approx. 60 days) based... |
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Community Base | 6 years 6 months ago | |
EleSense IoT - https://conservationx.com/project/id/159/elesenseiotnetworkforhec |
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Community Base | 6 years 9 months ago | |
Hi. I'm Andy Quitmeyer, a researcher exploring how we can combine DIY interactive technology with the practice of field biologists. I... |
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Community Base | 6 years 9 months ago | |
How can you help solve ocean conservation challenges? Participate in Make for the Planet Borneo and create solutions to conservation... |
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Community Base | 7 years 3 months ago | |
We invite you to have your say in the first WILDLABS.NET Community Survey. In 2018, you're going to see improved... |
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Community Base | 7 years 3 months ago | |
Dear Community, Please consider https://www.grb.net for conservation John Pozzi |
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Community Base | 7 years 3 months ago | |
Thanks Steph, I appreciate a semi-regular summary document - it might only occasionally throw up a 'new' story for community members (depends on other media... |
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Community Base | 7 years 4 months ago | |
oooh, yes please! |
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Community Base | 7 years 6 months ago | |
Wondering if any WildLabs members will be around in Washington DC Nov 14-15; they might want to attend this conf at the World Bank: http... |
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Community Base | 7 years 7 months ago | |
Hiya, Feel free to DM me if you want any help and advice applying. The Fellowship really is life changing if you are a free thinker in a closed system and have an idea you want... |
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Community Base | 7 years 7 months ago | |
Hi all, I was shown this article by a friend, it talks about some of the most common passwords that are used. It got me... |
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Community Base | 7 years 8 months ago |
Bengal tiger cub dies of cold at Crimea zoo hit by power cuts.
4 December 2015 5:36pm
Rare friendship between a tiger and a goat!
4 December 2015 5:29pm
wildtech.mongabay.com is a great resource
2 December 2015 10:40pm
Frequently Asked Questions
30 October 2015 5:43pm
3 December 2015 2:19pm
Thanks for the link - yes, I agree Mongabay's WildTech areas is a great resource for anyone interested in keeping up to date with the latest conservation tech news. Sue Palminteri's article is facinating and is definitely worth a read. The video showing the daily movement of elephants is particularly interesting (see the screenshot below) - it was a case study Katherine Chou of Google.org spoke about in her Fuller Symposium address as well. That they're getting close to real time monitoring is very exciting - it would have been amazing to have that capacity in other projects I've been involved with.
The key take-aways you highlight match a lot of what came up in the Fuller Symposium and other discussions about HWC. The consensus from Wired in the Wild - Can technology save the planet? was that no, it cannot. It is simply a very useful tool that, when used appropriately, could have significant impacts in the challenges conservation is attempting to tackle. Numerous speakers drove home the point that technology is not and should not be the starting point; we need to be technology agnostic. We must start by understanding the challenge and then looking at what (if any) technology might help to address it given the circumstances.
The Elephants and Bees approach is a great example of why we need to start with challenge rather than the technology. Sometimes the best solution is the low tech approach. Nilanga Jayasinghe highlighed this in her thought piece about HWC - giving a similar example of work WWF is doing in Nepal:
'During a recent visit to Nepal, I visited rural villages where wild elephants often raid rice fields during harvest season. The communities had installed electric fences but this tool didn't always succeed on its own. Elephants are smart and persistent: they had learned to break the fence’s electric current, and then the fence itself, by using trees to push over the supporting stakes. To solve this problem, we worked with farmers to dig fish ponds in front of the fences as an additional obstacle. Adding an additional barrier not only made it harder for the elephants to get into the fields, it also gave the communities more time to respond and drive elephants away. This simple solution has not only reduced elephant raids, but has also improved local livelihoods from the sale of the fish grown in the ponds.'