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Emerging Tech / Feed

Technology is changing and evolving faster than ever, and as it does, our community members are looking for the next big thing to revolutionize their conservation tech work. To chat about your favorite new tools that are just emerging in the field and discover innovations you haven't yet heard of, join this group!

discussion

State of the art thermal imaging core and the zoo

First of all I would like to extend my thanks and gratitude to Minke Geense from Gaiazoo, Limburg, The Netherlands for making this test possible.I recently obtained a couple of...

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I would also be interested - looking at starting a project that need observation of large african animals with nocturnal habits... Holy grail with unlimited funding would be a grid of 100's of cameras :-)

@HeinrichS there’s still time for you or anyone else to make a funding submission to the wildlabs 2025 grants ❤️❤️❤️

I haven't applied for wildlabs funding, but I would love for others to apply that want to use my systems. My preference goes to those who want to use the most units :-)

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discussion

Underwater wireless communication

Does anyone have any knowledge/experience of underwater wireless communication (i.e. sensor to surface)? Specifically using acoustic modems, see here.

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It's probably much easier to find a company selling acoustic modems than to try and create your own...very challenging environment to work within. I have about 10 years working with underwater acoustics (as a non-engineer). 

To give you the best advice, I need a bit more information about your specific application. Underwater communication typically relies on acoustic modems because radio waves don't travel well through water. For longer distances, a hybrid solution is often used. This could involve an acoustic modem transmitting data from your underwater sensor to a surface buoy or platform. The buoy could then relay the data to shore using traditional radio communication, such as 900MHz radios (even commercially available options like Ubiquiti radios, depending on distance and line-of-sight). To help me understand your needs and recommend the right approach, could you tell me more about:

Data Rate Requirements: How much data do you need to transmit, and how often?

Range: What is the vertical distance between your sensor and the surface receiver?

Environment: Are you working in shallow or deep water? What is the water temperature, salinity, and expected noise level?

Power Budget: How much power is available for the underwater sensor and modem?

Cost: What is your budget for the acoustic modem system?

Integration: How will you integrate the modem with your sensor and surface receiving system?

Real-time or Delayed: Do you need the data in real-time, or can it be stored and transmitted later?

Steve and I are looking to develop a low-cost benthic drift camera with a live video feed. Our hope is to use an acoustic modem to give us a low quality feed for navigation / hazard avoidance.  This could be as simple as a small black and white image refreshed every 1 sec. What we need to know from the system is are we at the bottom? and are we about to hit an obstacle? 

Data Rate Requirements: A very low quality (360p) video stream - could be black & white and low fps to reduce bit rate requirements (hopefully 1kbps)

Range: At least depth 500m but ideally down to 2,000m (deployed below a vessel from a tether)

Environment: Deep water temperature range down to 0C. Open ocean salinity levels (33-35 psu). Limited noise apart from deployment vessel (engine & echosounder)

Power Budget: Transmitter must be powered by a battery capable of continuous working for at least 1 hour.

Cost: Ideally under £1000 (GBP) for the transmitter & receiver.

Integration: Don't know. We are hoping to plug into an arduino or equivalent.

Real-time or Delayed: We need real time transmission with very limited lag for slow moving obstacle avoidance.

It's a big ask, but any pointers would be very welcome

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discussion

Conservation Data Strategist?

Hello everyone – long time lurker, first time poster...I’m the founder of a recently funded tech startup working on an exciting venture that bridges consumer technology and...

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Great resources being shared! Darwin Core is a commonly used bio-data standard as well.  

For bioacoustic data, there are some metadata standards (GUANO is used by pretty much all the terrestrial ARU manufacturers). Some use Tethys as well.

Recordings are typically recorded as .WAV files but many store them as .flac (a type of lossless compression) to save on space. 

For ethics, usually acoustic data platforms with a public-facing component (e.g., Arbimon, WildTrax, etc.) will mask presence/absence geographical data for species listed on the IUCN RedList, CITES, etc. so that you're not giving away geographical information on where a species is to someone who would use it to go hunt them for example. 

 

Hello, I am experienced in conservation data strategy. If you want to have a conversation you can reach me at SustainNorth@gmail.com.

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discussion

Mass Detection of Wildlife Snares Using Airborne Synthetic Radar

Mass Detection of Wildlife Snares Using Airborne Synthetic RadarFor the last year my colleauges Prof. Mike Inggs (Radar - Electrical Engineering, Unviversity of Cape Town) and...

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 Is thisvfunding grant an opportunity? https://www.dronedeploy.com/blog/expand-your-impact-with-a-grant-from-dronedeploy

Hi David, this is an incredible project. Would you be interested in sharing more of your experience with AI and wildlife conservation with my students? They are currently researching this, and would greatly benefit from speaking with a professional in the field. Thank you for considering!

Hats off to your team for this absolute game-changing technology! 

We rescue stray and wild animals in Taiwan, and the bulk of our work is saving animals maimed by wire snares and gin traps. We've become better at finding the devices, but still not good at all. There's simply too much difficult terrain to cover and we only have eyeballs and hiking sticks to find them. We know roughly where they are because the maimed stray dogs will eventually find their way onto a road and be reported to us. Then we close one of them, set up a trail camera, get the evidence of the poacher in the act of re-setting it, and get him prosecuted and shut down. But we need to be able to scale this greatly.

I've been using a thermal-imaging drone to locate stricken animals and am now considering buying another drone more suited to finding traps and snares. Some newer drones are able to navigate through forest without crashing into thin branches, so I've been looking into equipping one with LiDAR to see if that can detect the devices. But then I came across your YouTube channel and then this post about using airborne synthetic radar, and I'm incredibly excited to see where you might take this incredible technology.

How can we get our hands on the SAR you're using? It's 3 kg, right? I'm wondering if I could fit it to a suitable drone. If it works above forest canopy to detect traps and snares on the forest floor, then I can use a load-carrying drone instead of a light obstacle-avoidance drone.

If you made the SAR yourselves, then maybe think about crowdfunding for your project. I'd happily pledge funds if it meant I could get my hands on the kind of equipment you're using.

I can't tell you how happy I am thinking about all the animals' lives you'll save with this. Don't just remove the snares—gather evidence and put the poachers out of business too!

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Link

Podcast: The State of Nature Tech with Gilad Goren

In this episode join Gilad Goren, as we discuss the state of nature tech around the world ranging from nature fintech to artificial intelligence and remote sensing. We also discuss the role of NatureTech in addressing challenges around environmental disclosure frameworks.

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discussion

Can wireless charging technology be used for animal sensors?

Recently I have read many papers on animal research, and I found that one of the most difficult problems is how to solve the problem of charging sensors. After all, for many small...

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Although this technology may not be mature now, and there are still many problems to be discussed and solved, I think it will have good application prospects. 

Unfortunately, I am just an undergraduate student in China, and what I can do is very limited. Maybe in the future I can also do some similar research or what I want to do. Just like you, I am studying hard now. 

Thank you very much for this forum and the professionals who responded to me. You have allowed me to see more perspectives and many things I didn't realize. Thank you very much!

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discussion

Resources wanted to advise on the business model of an emerging low-cost device

Dear Wildlabers,Our task team is working very hard to design a low-cost autonomous hydrophone for research, education and citizen science. The team is technically brilliant at...

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Dear @jared ,

Thank you so much for your answer. We have been focusing very deeply into the technology part of the challenge and not yet on the legal issues or product lifecycle. Definitely a lot of food for thoughts there.... thanks!

Dear @jared ,

Thank you so much for your answer. We have been focusing very deeply into the technology part of the challenge and not yet on the legal issues or product lifecycle. Definitely a lot of food for thoughts there.... thanks!

Jared's answer is excellent IMHO. One level down, you have a couple of options. One is to charge for the convenience of buying a finished, assembled, and tested product, that's for the folks that have money and no time. Those that have time but no money can build it themselves from the open source. One danger to this approach is if low cost chinese clones come on the market, whether they do probably depends a lot on the size of the market.

Another option is to withhold some 'pro/plus' feature from the open source, that depends on whether you can identify such features. A similar option is to offer features that big outfits with good funding need. For example, you could offer calibrated versions at a premium, if that's applicable and needed by such organizations. In many cases companies sell devices cheap that are usable by someone who one has one or a couple and then charge for a management system for those that have dozens or hundreds of devices, dunno whether this applies to your case. All this comes down to whether you can segment your customer base so you can create premium features for the wealthy segment.

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discussion

Conservation tech in Human Wildlife Conflict

I am looking   for effective and low cost   conservation tech as a tool for Human Wildlife conflict mitigation. Anyperson with an idea kindly help.

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Odor based methods would be interesting. Provided they didn't need to be replenished too often.

We find varied stimulus prevents habituation.

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event

Design-led innovation for nature

How can space-enabled data and services be translated into information that is trusted and actionable, fuelling responsible behaviours towards nature? A new programme where SMEs will be paired with design consultancies...

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Link

AI Based Animal Detection Demo App for iPhone

In this post, I describe an animal recognition demonstration app I developed for the iPhone. The “MegaDetector-Demo” app uses the latest “MegaDetector” animal detector model from PyTorch-Wildlife to identify animals, people and vehicles in a live video feed from the iPhone...

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article

Listen to the Future: A Bioacoustics Horizon Scan

We are thrilled to introduce our new horizon scan, which will chart the future of bioacoustics. By collectively prioritizing emerging innovations that could transform the field, we aim to build consensus, facilitate...

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Super excited to be in involved in this and can't wait to see what comes of it!!
We are looking forward to hear your ideas for reaching new sonic frontiers!! Use the google form on the article.
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discussion

ChatGPT for conservation

Hi, I've been wondering what this community's thoughts are on ChatGPT? I was just having a play with it and asked:"could you write me a script in python that loads photos and...

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