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Header image: Laura Kloepper, Ph.D.

discussion

Unveiling the Cicada Symphony: Seeking Support for Bioacoustics Research

๐ŸŒฟ๐ŸŽต Calling all nature enthusiasts and conservation advocates! ๐ŸŽต๐ŸŒฟ As an independent researcher, I'm exploring the mesmerizing world of cicada sounds using low-cost passive acoustic...

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If you're interested in a free, no-code ecoacoustic analysis platform for your data, check out Arbimon!

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event

Fundraising Workshop: Caribbean Region

The aim of the fundraising workshop is to increase capacity of young conservationists to obtain funding and to raise the quality of applications to CLP and other small grants programmes

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discussion

BirdWeather | PUC

Hi Everyone,I just found out about this site/network!I wanted to introduce myself - I'm the CEO of a little company called Scribe Labs.  We're the small team behind...

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I love the live-stream pin feature!

Hi Tim, I just discovered your great little device and about to use it for the first time this weekend. Would love to be directly in touch since we are testing it out as an option to recommend to our clients :) Love that it includes Australian birds! Cheers Debbie

Hi @timbirdweather I've now got them up and running and winding how I can provide feedback on species ID to improve the accuracy over time. It would be really powerful to have a confirmation capability when looking at the soundscape options to confirm which of the potential species it actually is or confirm it is neither to help develop the algorithms.

Also, is it possible to connect the PUC to a mobile hotspot to gather data for device that isn't close to wifi? And have it so that it can detect either wifi or hotspot when in range? Thanks!

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discussion

Unlock New Features by Earning Your Community Involvement Badge!

Hello WILDLABS Community!As you may have noticed, we rolled out our new Badges feature this week! (Havenโ€™t heard about the update yet? Learn about badges here.) One of...

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The journey to Ent begins 

@Rob_Appleby follow these instructions to get your Sprout badge!

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Link

Using citizen science image analysis to measure seabird phenology

Our new paper uses data from the citizen science project, Seabird Watch (hosted on the Zooniverse platform; seabirdwatch.org), to measure seabird phenology. Volunteers marked birds in time-lapse images to investigate arrival and departure to/from the breeding grounds.

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discussion

Now for Wildlife

Hello community, I wanted to share some exciting updates about my ongoing conservation project for endangered species. I post this here because you have been very supportive and I...

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article

Introducing Badges: A new WILDLABS feature!

Weโ€™re unveiling badges, a new feature that allows you to showcase how youโ€™re involved in WILDLABS. Keep track of engagement, show off your collection, and maybe even engage in some friendly competition.

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So exciting, and so fun! What a nice idea to keep the community engaged!
I find it a great idea, but I hope it keeps the badge junkie in me from adding too much BS additions just to get the badge!How did you arrive to the achievement counts for the...
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discussion

Audiomoth Energy consuption estimates

Hi All,I'm conducting a biodiversity survey that includes a grid of audiomoths. I have 53 deployed, with the following schedule: 15 seconds every minute, 4:00-12:00, and 16:00-24:...

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Agree with the differences between microSD cards. I tested Sandisk Ultra, Samsung EVOplus, and some no-name cards I found myself in possession of. Unfortunately I did not have a logging device, but I watched what was happening on my multimeter. The µMoth with an Ultra was peaking at over double the current flow of the EVOplus. The no-name card was peaking at about the same as the EVOplus but had a near constant background drain that was not obvious with the other cards.

Apparently, cards of different sizes also use different amounts of power:

It would be great if someone with a data-logging multimeter could conduct a search to find the most power miserly cards out there, but it would be a constant search as card specifications are changing all the time. The Samsung EVOplus cards are no longer available, but I have no idea if Samsung has redesigned their cards or just rebranded them. Often manufacturers are going for the highest speeds rather than the most efficient card because most devices are using more power on sensors, screens, etc. so you barely notice a bit of surplus power going to the card.

I recently completed a survey using SongMeter minis and most units managed two weeks of nocturnal recording using eneloops and sandisk cards. But I had a couple of units that had only managed for or five nights so I redeployed with fresh batteries assuming we must have had some badly charged cells. After a week I went back to collect the units only to discover they had again gone for less than a week so this time I had some spare SM minis so I swapped the same cards into those with fresh batteries and redeployed again. After another week I went back and the same issue. We had sufficient data by now so I did not redeploy again but I concluded it was something about the SD cards that was causing the problem all along. If they were mine I would have tested them, but they went back to the owners with sticky labels describing the problem items.

@Hubertszcz you might also consider dropping your sample rate to 32, 16 or even 8 kHz. Do you actually have target species calling at frequencies over 16 kHz. Less data volume means fewer writes to the card. Also bear in mind that short audio bursts have storage and processing overheads compared with fewer longer bursts.

Is there an eco-battery? Well remember that half of the power you pump into a NiMH battery is lost as heat during charging. With correct charging, most types of rechargeable lithium batteries are only losing around 8 to 12 % as heat. Also with Lithium I don't think it is the mining as such that has to be destructive, rather the bad practice and corruption around some sources. A bigger concern is some components such as cobalt and nickel in those cells. LiFePO4 cells do not have the same concerns but they work at a lower voltage and I don't think you will find them in a size to fit an audioMoth case. Happy to be wrong about that though.

Hi Hubert,

There's been some research into which batteries are most effective with ARUs, and there's some results here: 

Battery quality can vary greatly, especially NiMh. Alkaline batteries can be largely recycled, reducing their environmental impact although being single use. The results above doesn't take into account SD card variation, but should hopefully be a good indication.

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discussion

eDNA from terrestrial plant

Hi everyone. I'm still confused about this. Is it feasible to employ environmental DNA (eDNA) for the detection of two distinct communities (animal and plant) within a single...

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discussion

Labelled Terrestrial Acoustic Datasets

Hello all,I'm working with a team to develop an on-animal acoustic monitoring collar. To save power and memory, it will have an on board machine learning detector and classifier...

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Thanks for sharing Kim.

We're using <1 mA while processing, equating to ~9 Ah running for a year. The battery is a Tadiran TL-5920 C 3.6V Lithium, providing 8.6 Ah, plus we will a small (optional) solar panel. We also plan to implement a threshold system, in which the system is asleep until noise level crosses a certain threshold and wakes up.

The low-power MCU we are using is https://ambiq.com/apollo4/ which has a built-in low power listening capability.

<1 mA certainly sounds like a breakthrough for this kind of device. I hope you are able to report back  with some real world performance information about your project @jcturn3 . Sounds very promising. Will the device run directly off the optional solar cell or will you include a capacitor since you cannot recharge the lithium thionyl chloride cell. I had trouble obtaining the Tadarian TL-5920 cells in Australia (they would send me old SL-2770s though) so I took a gamble on a couple of brands of Chinese cells (EVE and FANSO) which seemed to perform the same job without a hitch. Maybe in the USA you can get Israeli cells more easily than Chinese ones? 

Message me if you think some feeding sounds, snoring, grooming and heart sounds of koalas would be any use for your model training.

Really interesting project. Interesting chip set you found. With up to around 2mb sram thatโ€™s quite a high memory for a  ultra low power soc I think.

It might also be interesting while doing your research thinking about if there are any other requirements people could have for such a platform with a view towards more mass usage later. Thanks for sharing.

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article

Navigating corporate due diligence in the Voluntary Carbon Market

Emerging trends for Nature-Based Solutions project assessments

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Thanks, Cassie. How much is the annual license? I don't see it anywhere on your site.
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discussion

Lion Deterrence

Hello! We are a group of students at UC Berkeley working to design a lion deterrence system that is more affordable and cost-effective for community livestock protection and human...

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Hi @rokshanabushra 

So are you looking to replicate something like this?

https://predatorguard.com/products/predator-deterrent-light

This is, in principle at least, fairly simple, as it's really just some red LEDs and a small solar-battery power system. You could buy one of the commercial options and do a teardown (or I can do it if you like, as I'd be interested to find out exactly what they are doing). 

In lieu of that, I suspect a light-dependent resistor is probably used to control the lights coming on at night (i.e. something along these lines: https://www.instructables.com/How-to-Make-LDR-Darkness-Sensor-Circuit-Simple-DIY/).

If you employ some sort of 'blink' or flashing protocol (you could use a 555 timer to keep the costs down), you could save quite a bit of power (compared to running the lights constantly). For example, something along these lines: https://www.instructables.com/Adjustable-SingleDual-LED-Flasher-Using-555-Timer-/ You could also add a PIR motion sensor so it only comes on when nearby motion is detected, but of course the costs of building goes up. 

There are also a few off-the-shelf flasher designs that might be cheap enough already to consider (e.g. https://www.ledsales.com.au/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=142_143&products_id=2820). This seems like a reasonably good option for low power, although I have no idea how well it actually works...You can also buy LEDs that flash by themselves (e.g. https://www.ledsales.com.au/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=148_152_159&products_id=2951).

If you think sounds might also help (e.g. human noises etc.), check out the Boombox from Freaklabs: https://freaklabs.org/technology/boombox/ and it should be possible to add 'eyes' in the form of reflectors, or, some kind of LEDs that activate at the same time as the sound. You could contact Akiba or Jacinta about it as I am sure they'd help if they can: https://freaklabs.org/about/#:~:text=providers%20including%20ARGOS.-,the%20team,-Chris%20%E2%80%98Akiba%E2%80%99%20Wang

Anyway, happy to help if I can and all the best for the project.

Cheers,

Rob

 

Hi Rokshana,

Maybe you can try this product from India called ANIDERS - 

 I think this product would help you a lot. This is their website - 

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