Software plays an increasingly vital role in conservation, helping to protect and manage biodiversity through innovative technological solutions. It also facilitates collaboration among researchers, local communities, and governments, empowering them to develop sustainable conservation strategies. However, many of us working in conservation tech don't have the benefit of a large team of software experts to collaborate with or bounce ideas off of. We aim to change that.
This group is for anyone interested in applying software to conservation and wildlife research. Whether you're a developer eager to contribute to conservation or a newbie with valuable data and ideas but limited software experience, this group connects people with diverse expertise. It provides a space for asking questions, sharing resources, and staying informed about new technologies and best practices. We are also committed to supporting technologists and conservationists from the Global South, ensuring that everyone has access to the tools, knowledge, and opportunities to contribute meaningfully.
Our goal is to foster collaboration and avoid "reinventing the wheel" by sharing solutions, whether it's an application, design approach, or a simple script. We also aim to lower barriers to entry by offering mentorship and guidance and providing feedback on technical ideas. This supportive community is a place to learn, connect, and contribute to the advancement of conservation through software. Whether you're looking for software and mobile app developers to help you with your conservation tech needs, have questions about development, are looking for resources, or would like to share your own app, software, or gaming tools, this is the group for you!
Resources
Header photo: Trevor Hebert
Group curators
Wildlife Protection Solutions (WPS)
Software Engineer in Conservation Tech



- 2 Resources
- 15 Discussions
- 10 Groups
Wildlife Protection Solutions (WPS)
Director of Technology at Wildlife Protection Solutions. Primarily focuses on leveraging machine learning and advanced data analytics to combat poaching, monitor biodiversity, and predict environmental threats.
- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 5 Groups
Product management professional w/ 12+ years in software dev.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 3 Groups
- @stevef
- | he/him
Tech Matters
Project Director, Terraso.org (1000 Landscapes for 1 Billion People): open source software for farmers, ranchers & communities.
- 0 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 4 Groups
St. Lawrence University
Professor of Biology at St. Lawrence University
- 0 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 13 Groups
- @Edonga
- | He/His
Paul Edonga is from the Indigenous Pastoralist Tribes of Northern Kenya. A seasoned Leader in indigenous-led conservation of Endangered Beisa Oryx, African Small Antelopes their habitats & Dryland Forests. He's the founder of Save Beisa Oryx Community Resilience Trust-SBOC
- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 11 Groups
- @diego_lizcano
- | He/Him
Wildlife biologist interested in biodiversity monitoring and the conservation of mammals. Passionate photographer.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 7 Groups
Wildlife Protection Solutions (WPS)
Software Engineer at Wildlife Protection Solutions :D. My career goal is to use AI to restore the Earth's biodiversity. In my work I value efficiency, innovation, and sustainability.
- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 1 Groups
- @ecosystem2
- | he/him
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 5 Groups
Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior
- 0 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 5 Groups
- @PrasadDWilagama
- | He/Him
Data Scientist | Full Stack Developer | AI ML Engineer | Lifelong Learner | Researcher | AI & MI |
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 5 Groups
OpenForests
Back-end developer at OpenForests
- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 4 Groups
- @sruizguz
- | He / Him / His
Laboratory research technician at the Kitzes lab - University of Pittsburgh. My research focuses on acoustic monitoring for ecology and conservation.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 4 Groups
CEO of Anicare. Anicare produce next generation ear tag form tracking device for wildlife tracking


- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 6 Groups
Article
The new mobile game Wildeverse from Internet of Elephants lets players digitally teleport primates into their homes through a unique and engaging blend of technology and storytelling. Wildeverse creator and National...
13 May 2020
Article
We're excited to welcome the WildTrack FIT group to our community! Today, we'd like to introduce you to the Footprint Identification Technique (FIT) and share how you can incorporate this tracking method into your field...
6 May 2020
In this three-part WILDLABS feature article, we'll take a look at the various technologies used to fight the greatest threat to endangered condors, explore the innovations that may change the way we study and understand...
5 May 2020
Funding
Want to compete in the iWildCam 2020 competition identifying species in camera trap images to support biodiversity monitoring efforts and automatic species classification model improvements? Because the Workshop on Fine...
4 May 2020
The 2020 Arm Research Summit is accepting submissions from all research disciplines focusing on the role of technology in solving global challenges. Submissions should reflect the potential of sustainable, secure, and...
24 April 2020
Article
At the 2018 London Illegal Wildlife Trade Conference, we announced the WILDLABS Tech Hub, an accelerator programme created to support the development and scaling of groundbreaking technological solutions addressing the ...
13 April 2020
Article
At the 2018 London Illegal Wildlife Trade Conference, we announced the WILDLABS Tech Hub, an accelerator program created to support the development and scaling of groundbreaking technological solutions addressing the ...
26 March 2020
Community Announcement
Our first-ever WILDLABS virtual workshop about maximizing engagement and productivity in virtual events is now available to watch. We started by sharing lessons learned from the process we've developed for our Virtual...
18 March 2020
Trapped inside during the COVID-19 quarantine and looking to engage with conservation science without leaving your desk? Citizen science projects like those on Zooniverse offer a great opportunity to impact scientific...
18 March 2020
Machine learning is rapidly expanding as a useful field research tool, but its complexity can intimidate even seasoned tech conservationists. Edge Impulse aims to make machine learning solutions accessible,...
16 March 2020
2020 marked our fifth year holding our annual #Tech4Wildlife Photo Challenge, and our community made it a milestone to remember. Conservationists took to Twitter last week to share their best high-tech snapshots from...
4 March 2020
The Esri Conservation Program is now accepting applications for grant assistance to access its ArcGIS Solutions for Protected Area Management Application. This system provides access to a suite of both mobile and web...
4 March 2020
June 2025
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46 Products
Recently updated products
Description | Activity | Replies | Groups | Updated |
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HI Robert, I have so many thoughts about this topic.. will try to keep them brief! It's definitely a discussion topic I'd like to throw around in the virtual... |
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Software Development | 6 years 1 month ago | |
Hi Everyone, I am a technology professional with years of experience managing large scale software development projects. I... |
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Software Development | 6 years 3 months ago | |
Hi Everyone, I am a technology professional with years of experience managing large scale software development projects. I... |
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Software Development | 6 years 3 months ago | |
Congratulations! This looks like great tech. |
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Software Development | 6 years 3 months ago | |
Hi everyone, I'm Marian and I work for Realchangers. We are a startup focused on people, who want to connect their... |
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Software Development | 6 years 3 months ago | |
The SMART Partnership is hosting the first ever Global SMART Marine Training of Trainers this upcoming March 18-22... |
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Software Development | 6 years 3 months ago | |
Hello Sean I just had another thought: industrial machine vision systems come with all sorts of image inspection tools including such things as "edge detection". I... |
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Software Development | 6 years 3 months ago | |
Our friends over at rOpenSci are having a community call next week that members of this group might be interested in joining. rOpenSci... |
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Software Development | 6 years 5 months ago | |
The SMART Partnership is hosting a regional Training of Trainers focused on advanced SMART use this upcoming ... |
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Software Development | 6 years 5 months ago | |
Hi Ross, We are developing a web-based platform with multiple tools to analyse biodiversity quality, habitat assessement management and other apps. We need some help thinking... |
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Software Development | 6 years 5 months ago | |
Love it! Covers so many of my interests - conservation, beekeeping and fiddling with Arduinos - would love to know more about the project. |
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Software Development | 6 years 5 months ago | |
Hey Gautum, Looks like the interview went really well! If people weren't able to make it, Gautam's interview along iwth others in the series are all available... |
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Software Development | 6 years 5 months ago |
The Spatial Monitoring and Reporting Tool (SMART)
15 March 2016 12:00am
Ecotech Grants from the Captain Planet Foundation
18 February 2016 12:00am
Upcoming Courses on Coding
10 February 2016 12:00am
Playing with Complexity: Games and Systems Thinking
13 January 2016 12:00am
Can gaming help conservation? - Wildsense Tiger App
27 November 2015 11:01am
11 January 2016 1:29pm
Hi Aaron,
It's a great concept of using gaming for the benefit of conservation, but I do have one big question about Wildsense and tigers. Since poaching is one of the main threats to the 3,000 or so remaining wildl tigers, there are great risks involved with publicizing the location and timing of any tiger sightings.
Furthermore, this approach can probably only work for Bengal tigers, since other tiger species, such as Sumatran and Malayan, are very rarely sighted, even by the most dedicated conservationists ( or poachers), as their jungle habitat is so dense. For Bengal Tigers, there are already ventures for online monitoring and identificaton, such as Tigernation.org.
Good luck with your project. Barbara from BiodiversityBusiness.
11 January 2016 6:33pm
Hi Barbara,
You are right in that cyberpoaching is becoming an increasing risk. I have seen various cases where information posted on social media has provided too much information and then ended up in the wrong hands (e.g. http://www.army.mil/article/75165/Geotagging_poses_security_risks/).
We need to be careful about the accuracy of information that is disclosed. Providing an approximate time and location seems to be the most popular adopted approach.
Hacking is another issue. For example, I have seen research demonstrating the potential to gain unauthrised access to GPS collar data.
Our main focus has been the Bengal Tiger but we want to see how much we can learn about other tigers as well. Our end goal is to support a range of animal species.
P.S. I am pleased that you are aware of http://www.tigernation.org - I co-founded it :)
Mobile Phone Reporting for Rapid Wildlife Health Response in Uganda
22 December 2015 12:00am
Gaming for Good: Minecraft and Quiz Up
3 December 2015 12:00am
Case Study: Gaming for Good with Runescape and Angry Birds
26 November 2015 10:55am
Gaming for Good: Runescape and Angry Birds
25 November 2015 12:00am
From Data Collection to Decisions
6 November 2015 12:00am
28 December 2015 7:09pm
Hi Steph,
Thanks for your message. I would be delighted to answer your question about Wildsense.
You are correct that our aim is to do a lot more than raise awareness and engange citizens with our Wildsense Tigers game.
We are using images from a range of image sharing websites that have been uploaded by people online and publicly shared. Each photograph contains valuable information that often includes the time and location that the photograph is taken. If we can understand when a photo was taken, where it was taken, and the individual animal in the photograph, then we can start to build up a picture of the movement of individuals. We are benefiting from people power from the users that are both indirectly uploading photographs online and also directly interacting with our Wildsense game. We are combining this with computing power with our data analysis, computer vision and machine learning software.
We are doing this experiment on a large scale and we believe that "the wisdom of the crowd" will enable us to gather and analyse enough information so that we can build an accurate picture. We started with wild tigers and our plan is to create a platform that can be used for other species as well. We are working on other animals already behind the scenes.
I hope that answers your question.
Best wishes,
Aaron Mason