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Conservation Dogs / Feed

Conservation dogs are making a difference in conservation through their noninvasive ability to detect elusive species in the wild, flag illegal wildlife trade products, and help poachers fight wildlife crime. Whether you work with conservation dogs, you're interested in incorporating them into your work, or you just want to learn about how dogs can support and enhance conservation technology's effectiveness, you're in the right place!

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GPS collars for domestic dogs

Hi Everyone - I'm quantifying home ranges and contact rates between wildlife, pastoralists, and domestic animals (livestock guardian dogs and livestock) living on shared...

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What are your parameters? Do you need yes no movement, which could be collected with an accelerometer and no lat-long data?

Movement on an XY grid once an hour within a tightly bounded area?

High resolution once per second data? Large geographic area?

Different technologies deliver ddifferent datasets. Sometimes, significantly!

Hi Stephanie, at https://Savannahtracking.com we develop and manufacture a variety of collars with sizes ranging from about 95 grams for Raptors, 200grams - 1200g for mammals, and collars for large mammals such as Elephants. We currently have collars deployed on Dingoes which are about the same size as domestic dogs, and I believe that a similar solution will be perfect for your needs.
Our GPS collars can be programmed to collect high resolution data (15-minute gps positions) with hourly uploads via iridium satellite to our server where you can view and download the data from our dedicated windows or MAC SDM platforms. We also have a view only android/ios app. All our collars have two-way satellite communication, Internet based downloading via the free accompanying Savannah Tracking data manager software, automated Google Earth links for visualization, fully user definable geo fencing allowing for point, line and polygon fences and automated app and mail alarms in case of zone violation.

Kindly reach out to us and we can discuss a bespoke solution for your tracking needs at info@savannahtracking.com

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discussion

Conservation dogs deployed in Assam to counter poaching

Hello all!  I personally love reading articles about how man's best friend is contributing to conserving some of the world's most imperiled species. I just came...

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Hi jprobert, my name is Jennifer Hartman and I work with Rogue Detection Teams. I wanted to share some other resources for you if you are still interested in learning more about conservatin detection dogs and thier applications. From live animals, invasive species as well as scat and toxin surveys, our teams have conducted a great many projects around the world and we're happy to talk shop with you. There are also several other detection dog groups around the world and if you would like to be put in touch with them, we're happy to assist. Please let us know if we can help. We can be reached at contact@roguedogs.org or you can first check us out at roguedogs.org. Warm regards, Jennifer

Yes, Belgian Malinois dogs are very common nowadays to accompany park rangers in South Africa. 🐕‍🦺
The park I worked with had three of them, but training them is quite expensive, both time- and money-wise. 
Still, they are incredibly good and worth this effort. We had them walk along after fencecuts and they led us right past all the snares laid by poachers. Not to say how fierce they can be if things get serious and their handler lets them loose on a target...
They also help the ground rangers sense natural dangers like lions etc. earlier, or also while otherwise occupied (with eg radio etc).
 

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discussion

Collar Automatic Release Mechanisms

Hi All!I've been developing an animal-worn acoustic and environmental-sensing focused system as part of my PhD. When speaking with researchers on piloting my device, one of the...

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Re: the conversation about alternatives to knots/tying nylon line, I wonder if something like these PCB mount screw terminals would be strong enough to hold line in place for a long time, but also not sever it? They could be mounted either side of the nichrome coil, with holes for the nylon to come through from underneath, pulled over the nichrome and then through the screw terminal, where it can be secured in place. The metal screws could potentially be replaced with nylon to make it a little 'softer' on the line maybe? Below is an absolutely amazing diagram of the idea! Could even make a PCB for it all (or mod the current drop-off PCB to have this at the front)...the only thing is they aren't the smallest things in the world...so good for larger drop-offs maybe (certainly ok for AWDs I reckon) but not smaller critters...

I've been trying to find something off the shelf along those lines @Rob_Appleby

This is a cubesat example that's neat but not really meant to withstand the load an animal would put on it.

Seems like most tensioning examples out there are custom made but I'm convinced it can be done with off the shelf parts.

Regarding worries of damaging the line you can use ptfe tube or polyester/fep heatshrink for added abrasion resistance.

The PCB mount terminals are actually quite robust and paired with a lock washer and something that would better secure the nylon (e.g., a piece of flat grooved plastic to add compressive loads across the string and not pinch it), I think it would work nicely. 

As a separate idea, I just designed a circuit with SMD threaded standoffs, which I am going to secure in plastic and screw onto aluminum pieces that I'll be testing the ElectRelease with once it delivers. The standoffs are mounted on a circuit board, giving a 50V differential with a single-cell LiPo, hopefully releasing the epoxied aluminum plates. 

https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/w%C3%BCrth-elektronik/9774027151R/5320625
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article

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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discussion

CollarID: multimodal wearable sensor system for wild and domesticated dogs

Hi Everyone! I (and my team) are new to the WildLabs network so we'd like to post an early-stage project we've been working on to get some feedback!  SummaryThe...

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Hi Patrick, 

This is so cool, thanks for sharing! It's also a perfect example of what we were hoping to capture in the R&D section of the inventory - I've created a new entry for #CollarID so it's discoverable and so we can track how it evolves across any mentions in different posts/discussions that come up on WILDLABS. This thread appears on the listing, and I'll make you three the contacts for it too. But please do go in and update any of the info there as well! 

Steph

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Link

Scent detection dogs as a novel method for oestrus detection in an endangered species, the Tasmanian devil

Detection dogs may provide a non-invasive way to determine female receptivity, but this has not been explored in captive wildlife. This exploratory study investigated the use of detection dogs as a novel method of oestrus detection in the endangered Tasmanian devil

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discussion

Thinking out loud

I am a scat dog handler and have been looking to add tech. into my odor training. I got a fresh idea of making a self-dispensing machine that automates when a small novice puppy...

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Hi Naomi,

Sounds like exciting work!  I'm not a dog trainer but we did publish 2 articles on automating dog training, here about modifying the Treat and Train, and here.

All the best,

-harold

Thank you for this exciting reply and links to the papers. I use an olfactometer that utilizes Arduino boards. It has been used linked to a treat and train, although my system provides sound feedback and I provide the reinforcements. I found these links very interesting! 

These are great materials to refer to. I just have to wrap my amateur brain around the technological words but I should be fine.  Thank you Harold. 

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event

Working with Detection Dog Teams

Jennifer Hartman and Heath Smith will share about working with scent detection dogs on wildlife conservation projects in their talk entitled, “Working with Detection Dog Teams: A Wildlife Conservation Methodology.”...

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Link

These Dogs Are a Bird's Best Friend | Audubon

Nice article from Audubon showcasing a variety of conservation dog projects: 'They can turn up endangered species, track down poachers, root out invasive pests, and prevent the spread of wildlife diseases'

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article

CERES TAG

Ceres Tag sends just in time alerts and GPS location to have the power to track and trace.

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discussion

Detection dogs in Conservation

In the Working Group COPE, species detection dogs are increasingly used as a detection method. They play a role in several projects and can detect different animal and plant...

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Thanks for sharing. We've funded research using a detection dog to succesfully find hibernating hedgehogs over winter. Wondering whether they're likely to be able to detect smaller hibernators - hazel dormice - on the forest floor?

I would bet that yes, they are capable of it-- the question is mostly detection distance and whether it's vauable in the field. We've had similar situations with turtle nests and other difficult targets.  

Do you have a few known hibernation sites that could be used to test dogs?  If so, that would be a big help.  Feel free to reach out to me or Alice Whitelaw (Alice@WD4C.org) if you'd like to discuss in more detail.

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discussion

Conservation Canine Conference

Wildlife Detection Dogs Online Conference The Wildlife Detection Dogs Conference from Conservation K9 Consultancy will bring together students,...

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