Human-wildlife conflict and coexistence is a shockingly common problem, often with enormous consequences for both individual animals and entire populations.
When human-wildlife conflict comes to mind, you may immediately think of wildlife crime instead - which isn't wrong, since many regions with wildlife crime problems like poaching are also areas where people may frequently deal with human-wildlife conflict, causing the two issues to go hand-in-hand. But human-wildlife conflict is a much broader issue encompassing many ways that human presence and interference can cause problems for us and animals alike. Human-wildlife conflict includes:
- Elephants trampling a farmer's crops, resulting in retaliation
- New real estate developments infringing on ecosystems where predator species live, leading to predators having less territory and less food, which in turn leads to predators attacking domestic animals and livestock
- Freeways dividing the territory of animals like mountain lions, leading to wildlife venturing into neighborhoods or being killed by cars
- Lead bullets used in hunting causing scavengers like condors to die of lead poisoning
These are just a few examples of how humans can negatively impact wildlife, and it's clear to see how many of these scenarios could escalate. Human-wildlife conflict solutions don't just include ways in which we can prevent these issues (for example, through tracking predators, monitoring populations' territories, or building barriers and wildlife crossings monitored by sensors), but also the ways in which we can help people connect with wildlife and care about learning to live alongside them.
If you're interested in solutions that can prevent human-wildlife conflict, join this group and get to know the people who are working to protect and save species around the world!
Header image: Casey Allen on Unsplash
No showcases have been added to this group yet.
- @RobynneKotze
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Conservation Director - Conservation of Natural Ecosystems Trust (CONNECT)
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- @Jeorgiopierre
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Field researcher and systems designer operating a mobile apicultural laboratory focused on the study of terroir-specific variation in bee-derived products. Through Apis Nomadica Labs, I deliver pollination services to regional farms while simultaneously collecting ecological data
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I created Snappy Mapper to make gathering geospatial data more accessible for everyone.

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- @Antoinette
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Director of Bring The Elephant Home. PhD in Biological Science with a thesis called “Aligning Elephant Conservation with Societal Aspirations”. Master of Arts in Biology at Miami University with dissertations on human-elephant coexistence solutions.
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- @tcsmith
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I am a conservation biologist interested in modeling social-ecological systems.
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- @Aurel
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Looking to reconcile biodiversity conservation and finance.


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Zoological Society London (ZSL)
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MSc student in wildlife management and conservation


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- @judithankamah
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I’m passionate about amphibian conservation, ecological research, and working with local communities to protect biodiversity
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- @Paladitya
- | He/His
Conservation biologist from Nepal and the founder of the Nature Conservation and Research Committee. He spearheads initiatives like the Bengal Florican Project, Birders of Nepal podcast, Wild Chapter, and The Ornithology, all aimed at advancing grassroots across South Asia.
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- @ahmedjunaid
- | He/His
Zoologist, Ecologist, Herpetologist, Conservation Biologist





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Making waves in wetland conservation: Explore the outcomes and insights from Ramsar COP15, a premier global event on wetland protection and sustainability
10 August 2025
Calling conservation organizations working to protect the Asian elephant, apply now for a chance to receive a grant of up to $ 5,000. Proposals are accepted year-round.Photo by Hu Chen on Unsplash.
4 July 2025
This is a chance to participate in a short survey about the preferences that conservation practitioners have for evidence. There's a chance to win one of three £20 Mastercard gift cards.
24 June 2025
A Post-Doc position is available to join the team coordinating the Urban Exploration Project – a collaborative initiative in partnership between the University of St. Andrews and the National Geographic Society.
2 May 2025
This project aimed to reduce human-carnivore conflict by building a resilient boma for a vulnerable family in Hunyari village. It served as a model for other families, promoting stronger livestock protection. The...
17 April 2025
WWF's Arctic Community Wildlife Grants program supports conservation, stewardship, and research initiatives that focus on coastal Arctic ecology, community sustainability, and priority Arctic wildlife, including polar...
7 March 2025
The worst thing a new conservation technology can do is become another maintenance burden on already stretched field teams. This meant Instant Detect 2.0 had to work perfectly from day 1. In this update, Sam Seccombe...
28 January 2025
The Zoological Society of London's Instant Detect 2.0 is the world's first affordable satellite connected camera trap system designed by conservationists, for conservationists. In this update, Sam Seccombe describes the...
21 January 2025
Wildlife on roads creates a significant hazard in rural areas, to humans and animals alike. Low-tech prevention methods such as overpasses give great results, but they are expensive and can’t cover every scenario. Now...
12 November 2024
Very nice video!
7 October 2024
The Connected Conservation is thrilled to announce our award's third round in collaboration with the Airbus Foundation. This award champions the use of cutting-edge satellite imagery to tackle biodiversity loss and...
30 September 2024
The Human-Wildlife Initiative operates in three areas, viz. France's Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur ( PACA ) region, French-speaking Switzerland and Spain. Each has it's own call with it's own specifics.
11 September 2024
October 2025
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32 Products
3 R&D Projects
42 Organisations
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Description | Activity | Replies | Groups | Updated |
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Hi everyone,I'm new here :)I'm doing my thesis of biology bachelor about Rhino poaching. I wanted to ask here if yu have some articles... |
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AI for Conservation, Ending Wildlife Trafficking Online, Human-Wildlife Coexistence, Wildlife Crime | 2 years 4 months ago | |
Hi Andrea! Although I am a keen user and observer of the Moveapps initiative, my R or Python coding skills are next to non- existing. I am therefore not likely to be contributing... |
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Animal Movement, Conservation Tech Training and Education, Data management and processing tools, Emerging Tech, Human-Wildlife Coexistence, Open Source Solutions, Software Development | 2 years 5 months ago | |
I just came across this interesting paper in which seismic monotoring of animals like elephants was mentioned. This is the study refered to:Cheers,Lars |
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AI for Conservation, Camera Traps, Emerging Tech, Ethics of Conservation Tech, Human-Wildlife Coexistence, Geospatial, Sensors | 2 years 8 months ago | |
Hi everyone, I'm new here! I'm a UX designer and researcher, and an animal lover. Excited to be part of Conservation Tech here at WildLabs... |
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AI for Conservation, Human-Wildlife Coexistence, Software Development, Wildlife Crime | 3 years 1 month ago | |
Hi @Femke_Hilderink , long time no speak! What an interesting problem/project! Does it have to be paint, as there was this project a while back: I don't know how it... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 3 years 1 month ago | |
Why this collaboration platform? What entails to become ENCOSH member? Tackling human-wildlife coexistence issues requires an holistic approach with various initiatives/... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 3 years 6 months ago | |
This is an awesome thread and very enlightening. Thank you! I started reading this as Oregon recently had an entire pack of wolves poisoned, and I wanted to understand the... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 3 years 8 months ago | |
My colleagues* and I have developed a model for identifying changemakers from forest-dependent communities, and incubating their ideas (... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 3 years 11 months ago | |
You should check out Smart Parks (https://www.smartparks.org/) and Hack the Poacher (https://www.hackthepoacher.com/). Also - Fazil, M., & Firdhous, M. (2018... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 4 years 4 months ago | |
For WildTrack's friends and supporters, we're offering a special @GivingTuesday opportunity by matching $ for $ donations up to $2,500 to... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 4 years 8 months ago | |
About a year ago, Lyn Watson from Australian Dingo Foundation approached me with an idea to develope a solution to reduce conflict between... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 4 years 10 months ago | |
We actually designed Boombox, the audio player shown above, based on the ABRS system by the Suraci paper and with Dr. Meredith Palmer. We made some optimizations on it since the... |
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Human-Wildlife Coexistence | 4 years 10 months ago |
Webinar: Wildlife Drones’ Dragonfly – Revolutionizing VHF Tracking Technology
3 February 2025 4:31am
INSTANT DETECT 2.0 - ALPHA TESTING
28 January 2025 3:18pm
INSTANT DETECT 2.0 – THE OPTIMISATION YEARS
21 January 2025 11:46am
Data science/analyst interested in volunteering for research or app development
17 January 2025 5:28am
State of the art thermal imaging core and the zoo
28 October 2024 6:12pm
13 January 2025 9:15am
I love those numbers 😀 indeed a holy grail. I’ll send you a private mail.
13 January 2025 9:23am
@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 :-)
Webinar: Drone-based VHF tracking for Wildlife Research and Management
9 January 2025 11:45pm
Mass Detection of Wildlife Snares Using Airborne Synthetic Radar
7 January 2024 6:50am
26 August 2024 1:14pm
Is thisvfunding grant an opportunity? https://www.dronedeploy.com/blog/expand-your-impact-with-a-grant-from-dronedeploy
24 October 2024 1:39am
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!
21 November 2024 4:52pm
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!
Instant Detect 2.0 and related cost
16 November 2023 12:50am
11 November 2024 9:16am
Sam any update on Instant Detect 2.0 - previously you mentioned that you hope to go into volume production by mid-2024?
I would love to also see a comparison between Instant Detect 2.0 and Conservationxlabs' Sentinel products if anyone has done comparisons.
Are there any other similar solutions currently on the market - specifically with the images over LoRa capability, and camera to satellite solution?
11 November 2024 6:41pm
Nightjar comes to mind but I am not too sure if it is actually “on the market”…
19 November 2024 6:44pm
There's quite a few diy or prototype solutions described online and in literature - but it seems none of these have made it to market yet as generally available fully usable products. We can only hope.
Using AI, barriers and bridges to help stop wildlife-vehicle collisions
12 November 2024 2:03pm
12 November 2024 6:50pm
13 November 2024 6:44am
Who gave you your last research travel grant? | ¿Quién le concedió su última beca de viaje de investigación? | Quem lhe concedeu sua última bolsa de viagem de pesquisa?
16 October 2024 6:21pm
16 October 2024 10:03pm
Thank you for your answer, Vanesa!
And for reminding me to add a translation.
18 October 2024 7:19pm
That is challenging and I'd be keen to hear other people's suggestions!
From the academic realm, I'll say that many graduate students get travel funding through scientific societies. E.g. the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation has seed grants:
https://tropicalbiology.org/grants-awards/atbc-seed-research-grant/
And Society for Conservation Biology has grad student awards:
https://conbio.org/mini-sites/scb-awards/student-awards
These are often restricted to members unfortunately. National/regional societies might be good resources for people to look into.
4 November 2024 1:49pm
Oops, sorry about that. I wrote a reply a few weeks ago, and I am pretty sure I clicked the button, but apparently something went wrong. So, another attempt
Thank you for your answer, @brandon. I had overlooked the scientific societies.
Membership may be an issue, but I noticed that the ATBC has diversified fees depending on career stage and the member country's economic development, and the SCB membership fee depends on income.
PolarBearWatchdog! Advancing Arctic Safety with an AI-driven Polar Bear Detection System
19 October 2024 3:19pm
23 October 2024 7:27am
I did a short presentation on our work with the polar bear alarm in the Wildlabs Variety Hour October 30th.
It can be found here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zr2Q8bUJZ8U
Roe deer protection needed in Hungary, national government should stop funding hunting organizations - call for international support
7 October 2024 11:58am
14 October 2024 12:41pm
Really? Can you share where its written.
Annex III: protected fauna species, do you need a glass?
14 October 2024 1:33pm
A quick search comes up with the following answer. Let us know if that helps.
Annex III of the European Environmental Agency (EEA) does not directly regulate the protection or hunting of specific species. Instead, it's important to look at Annexes II and IVof the EU Habitats Directive (Directive 92/43/EEC) for species protection and hunting regulations in the European Union.
Roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) is not listed in Annex IV (which covers strictly protected species), meaning it is not afforded the strictest protection that prevents all forms of exploitation. However, Annex III of the Bern Convention, which relates to species that may be exploited but require careful regulation, includes species like roe deer.
In many European countries, roe deer hunting is permitted under specific regulated conditions. These regulations aim to ensure sustainable hunting practices and maintain healthy population levels, with hunting seasons and quotas determined based on local wildlife management policies.
In summary, roe deer are generally not strictly protected across the EU, and hunting is allowed under regulation, though specific conditions depend on national and regional legislation.
Disclaimer: I can't guarantee that the above is not a hallucination :-)
15 October 2024 11:24am
Thanks, we know they are breeding these animals here, I asked, since it's seems to be an expensive hobby, we need to allocate more funding for rural women in entrepreneurship and access to technologies, reduce poverty in Hungary No1 priority.
That's the problem local peoples can not afford buying wild meat from the "local shop"
Fully uncontrolled activites in Hungary
Seeking Advice on Thermal Drones for Night-Time Elephant Observation
25 December 2023 9:53am
9 October 2024 6:07pm
When you say lower resolution do you also mean 640x480 resolution ? The drone Lars is referring to has that. Of course is higher than the budget of the inquirer. But I curious because things are changing. I have a 1280x1024 pixel thermal at the moment. Obviously anything but cheap.
14 October 2024 9:36am
@kimhendrikse Resolution is a term that can be confusing as it is applied to both the on-ground effective resolution: GSD (Ground Sampling Distance) as well as the resolution of the sensor. Ultimately the only thing that is important is if you can get the image quality that you need to be able to answer your research/management/security question. This is a result of the sensor resolution, the focal length of the lens and the distance from the object to the sensor. When there is a need to scan large areas drones need to fly higher to optimise battery life and ground covered and this reduces the effective resolution (GSD) regardless of which sensor you use. It depends on your needs if this is still sufficient or not. In my case, flying at 180m I have a GSD of 10.1cm which is enough to detect but not to classify animals.
14 October 2024 9:55am
180m is indeed very high and from above. I think a 640x512 thermal sensor with a 70mm lens can see animals at at 180m from sideways and could recognise something as a deer, but vertical I doubt it. In any case that's the specs of a handheld monocular I have and the distance that I see deer at that I believe could be recognised as deer.
I have a 1280x1024 pixel thermal camera here I will be testing but it's around 7x the price of the 640x512 one and quite a bit heavier.
Thanks for the details.
WILDLABS AWARDS 2024 - Fostering bat conservation and citizen science in Zimbabwe: Establishing bat groups and training individuals to use bat detectors
4 April 2024 12:12pm
24 April 2024 2:27pm
Thank you Robyn. Sure I will send more information to your email
9 September 2024 2:28pm
Hi everyone
Our project on fostering bat conservation and citizen science in Zimbabwe has reached another level. To date, the project team has established two bat groups in Bulawayo and Chimanimani. Forty-three people from these two provinces have been educated on bat biology and trained in the use of bat detectors. The trainees appreciated the importance of bats in the environment, and that their conservation is essential.
Due to limited resources, the training sessions were not sufficient for the trainees, as the Kaleidoscope software for analyzing data is somewhat complex. A similar training workshop will be conducted in Harare.
Next steps of project:
Continue training bat group participants on using bat detectors and analyzing acoustic data;
Reach out to other areas and establish bat groups across the country;
Promote and research important habitats for bats in Zimbabwe.
We continue to express our gratitude to @wildlabs for funding the project. The team: @Ronnie @Ropafadzo @Karen
1 October 2024 8:17pm
I would love to see my bat detector designs in use in Africa - drop me a line, let's see if we can get something to happen - I'm pipistrelledetector at gmail dot com

http://www.pippyg.com
Calling for applications for Round 3 of our Satellites for Biodiversity Award Grant
30 September 2024 5:22pm
Conservation tech in Human Wildlife Conflict
12 September 2024 1:50pm
23 September 2024 10:34pm
Thank you so much Brett.
I am not familiar with some of these tools such as critter alarm but I did search a little about it and it looks very interesting, I will look more on it's effectiveness on Elephants and Hyenas.
25 September 2024 4:51am
The beehive method is neat! Will have to read up on that.
25 September 2024 4:56am
Odor based methods would be interesting. Provided they didn't need to be replenished too often.
We find varied stimulus prevents habituation.
The Human–Wildlife Initiative has opened a call for proposals (€10-70k)
11 September 2024 4:22pm
Seeking Internship/Volunteer Opportunity in Human-Wildlife Interaction
25 August 2024 10:08pm
30 August 2024 8:46pm
Thank you so much CathyNj
4 September 2024 11:19pm
Dear Alex Rood,
Thank you so much for the advice. I’ll make sure to regularly check the career openings on resources page. I appreciate your support.
WCS Conservation Technology Webinar Series
23 August 2024 3:20pm
23 August 2024 7:04pm
23 August 2024 8:30pm
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup: Bioacoustics Policy Integration and Scientific Impact
22 August 2024 7:57pm
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup: Bioacoustics Data Analysis and AI
22 August 2024 7:22pm
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup: Bioacoustics Data Networks and Platforms
22 August 2024 5:45pm
WILDLABS Virtual Meetup: Bioacoustics Hardware Innovation
22 August 2024 5:25pm
Call for PapersManaging Human-wildlife Conflict in Big Cats
22 August 2024 3:19pm
Community Choice Award Winners: 2024 #Tech4Wildlife Photo Challenge
15 August 2024 2:41am
Human-wildlife conflicts junior consultancy
8 August 2024 7:54am
12 January 2025 9:04pm
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 :-)