Sensors already equip a range of tools to enhance monitoring capacity for conservation. Some of the higher bandwidth technologies, like camera traps and acoustic monitoring systems, have been essential elements of the conservation toolkit for decades, and thus have enough users that we've created dedicated WILDLABS groups to address them. But a whole range of lower bandwidth sensors beyond these core technologies are being increasingly integrated into conservation monitoring systems, and offer rich new insights into the wildlife and ecosystems we're all working to protect. As with many technologies, cost and access have historically been challenges to the adoption of new sensors, but with low-cost and open-source solutions on the rise, we're excited to see what the future of this space holds.
Getting Started with Sensors:
- Watch Shah Selbe's Tech Tutors episode on scaling FieldKit, an open-source conservation sensor toolbox, from a project to a successful conservation tech product.
- Check out our Virtual Meetup about Low-Cost, Open-Source Solutions in conservation tech, including a talk by Alasdair Davies on the Arribada Initiative's work with thermal sensors in early warning systems.
- For a more in-depth introduction, watch the first video in our datalogger mini-series: Freaklabs: How do I get started with Arduino?
In this group, you'll meet others who are using and innovating diverse sensors in their work, discuss ways to make sensors more effective & accessible for conservationists, learn about what sensors are already helping us accomplish in the field, and have the opportunity to ask and answer questions. Join this group to get started!
Header image: Emma Vogel, University of Tromsø
- @Mauricio_Akmentins
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National Scientific and Technical Research Council of Argentina (CONICET)
Herpetologist and conservationist, focused on the conservation of the endemic and threatened amphibian species of NW Argentina.
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- 3 Discussions
- 6 Groups
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- 3 Groups
Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS)
- 1 Resources
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- @YvanSG
- | he/him
Clemson University
Seabird ecologist at Clemson University, South Carolina Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit. Co-chair of Caribbean Seabird Working Group.
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- 53 Discussions
- 6 Groups
Prof at NC State University and Scientist at NC Museum of Natural Sciences
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I'm a Mechanical Engineer and I have been involved in test and measurement, IT maintenance consulting, database development, field installation, field maintenance, systems analysis, theater composition and an active synthesist. Currently engaged in conservation volunteer work
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- 7 Groups
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- @tutgut5
- | she/her
- 0 Resources
- 6 Discussions
- 8 Groups
- @NevilleCLS
- | He/Him
CLS (Collecte Localisation Satellites)
- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 14 Groups
Cornell University
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- 6 Groups
Smart Parks
Founder of Smart Parks - www.smartparks.org / Founder of OpenCollar - https://opencollar.io
- 0 Resources
- 13 Discussions
- 5 Groups
- @tmcgrath
- | He / Him
Geographer, Program Manager, Engineering Manager
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 8 Groups
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?
5 June 2024
Now accepting applications for two $15,000 grants to help protect wildlife through cutting-edge, technology-driven efforts
3 June 2024
Do you have photos and videos of your conservation tech work? We want to include them in a conservation technology showcase video
17 May 2024
Article
Read in detail about how to use The Inventory, our new living directory of conservation technology tools, organisations, and R&D projects.
1 May 2024
Article
The Inventory is your one-stop shop for conservation technology tools, organisations, and R&D projects. Start contributing to it now!
1 May 2024
Technology to End the Sixth Mass Extinction. Salary: $132 - $160k; Location: Seattle WA; 7+ years of experience in hardware product development and manufacturing; View post for full job description
1 May 2024
The Smithsonian National Zoo & Conservation Biology Institute is seeking a Postdoctoral Research Fellow to help us integrate movement data & camera trap data with global conservation policy.
22 April 2024
In a recent publication we tested Underwater Passive Acoustic Monitoring (UPAM) as a feasible non-invasive technique to study the calling behavior of therathened aquatic Andean frogs under natural conditions in the...
6 April 2024
Article
You’re invited to the WILDLABS Variety Hour, a monthly event that connects you to conservation tech's most exciting projects, research, and ideas. We can't wait to bring you a whole new season of speakers and...
22 March 2024
This funding opportunity is to support projects to enhance existing, high TRL (7-9) marine biogeochemical sensors and integrate with National Marine Equipment Pool’s autonomous underwater platforms. You must be based...
11 March 2024
The IQOE Task Team on Low-Cost Hydrophones for Research, Education, and Citizen Science is looking for industry partners to develop a low-cost hydrophone.
15 December 2023
Funding
With $60,000, $30,000, and $10,000 grants available for 14 outstanding projects, the support of engineering and technology talent from Arm (the leading semiconductor design company), and access to the world’s biggest...
1 December 2023
December 2023
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November 2023
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12 Products
Recently updated products
101 Products
1 R&D Projects
69 Organisations
Recently updated products
Recently updated R&D Projects
Recently updated organisations
Description | Activity | Replies | Groups | Updated |
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Hi. I've been following the opencollar initiative and was wondering what the current status is. The project looks amazing! |
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Sensors | 3 years 10 months ago | |
Hi all, Some ETAG rfid-readers developped by Eli Bridge et al. are now avaible at https://www.labmaker.org/collections/earth-and-ecology/products/etag. The price is high,... |
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Sensors | 3 years 10 months ago | |
Hi all, Some ETAG rfid-readers are now avaible at https://www.labmaker.org/collections/earth-and-ecology/products/etag. The price is high, though: USD139. Yvan |
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Sensors | 3 years 10 months ago | |
I'd love to chat more! I'll be reaching out soon! |
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Sensors | 3 years 11 months ago | |
Yes im hoping the power bank and a few extra mp3s will get it done this year. will look into a better system this winter now that I have some help:) |
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Sensors | 4 years ago | |
Please see my edits above |
+4
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Sensors | 4 years 1 month ago | |
We are developing a Raspberry Pi 4 sized SDR --- frequency range 20Mhz-6GHz. Rx Sensitivity around 120 --- higher is possible with some... |
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Sensors | 4 years 1 month ago | |
Dear all, I am currently developing a method to extract subgroups from dynamic network data. My current use case is data collected on... |
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Sensors | 4 years 2 months ago | |
I need to play a loop of sound to desensitize animals for project. The system needs to be solar powered 24/7 for 2-3 months. I have solar... |
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Sensors | 4 years 3 months ago | |
Hi all, we have been developing low cost open source proximity loggers for small animals (minimum logger weight is currently 1g) and we are... |
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Sensors | 4 years 5 months ago | |
Hi Alasdair- Currently the Lepton is not on the list. If you would, please fill out the form on this webpage and request the Lepton be added - I will also bring it... |
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Sensors | 5 years ago | |
Hi all, I am currently working on my grad film project, and I'm looking for UK environmental projects using the Raspberry... |
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Sensors | 5 years ago |
3yr Postdoctoral Associate: Remote Sensing and Unoccupied Aircraft Systems
10 August 2022 5:29pm
Sulcata tortoise tracker options
8 August 2022 10:07pm
CERES TAG
22 July 2022 3:36am
The battery challenge - how to reduce battery waste
8 February 2019 2:00pm
15 July 2022 10:09pm
So-called "Li-Ion AA" batteries are a potential alternative to NiMH for applications requiring AA form-factor batteries. These "batteries" contain internal power converter to go from Li-Ion cell voltage (3.7V) to AA standard 1.5 Volt. Based on lab (not field) experiments, they perform better than NiMH over temperature, and have a longer lifetime, though they are more expensive. I suspect they have the same (eventual) disposal issues.
Deep Tech: Rechargeable Li-Ion AA Batteries for Trail Cameras - Winterberry Wildlife
I report on capacities of EBL, Pownergy, and Tenavolts rechargeable Li-Ion AA batteries under trail camera load and temperature conditions.
Winterberry WildlifeTrail Camera Batteries: Internal AA-Cell Options - Winterberry Wildlife
Trail cameras need power. In this post, I cover primary and rechargeable trail camera batteries including capacities and a selection guide.
Winterberry Wildlife15 July 2022 10:16pm
On the topic of potential sources for harvested power, and in the category of "out there"... I have spent some considerable (likely too much) time exploring harvesting power from diurnal temperature variation using thermal reservoir(s) and thermo-electric generator(s). The physics is not too bad, but the engineering is a bear. Project currently on hold, but if someone is interested, happy to discuss.
Earth Species Project - Senior AI Research Scientist
15 July 2022 6:40pm
Fast Company Feature: Smart Parks
14 July 2022 4:19pm
A Triphibian Surveillance Vehicle
9 July 2022 2:23pm
Conservation Technology and the Supply Chain
16 June 2022 2:27pm
Multiple Roles with Rainforest Connection
16 June 2022 9:15am
Join Seeed’s “IoT Into the Wild Contest for Sustainable Planet 2022” on Hackster to Get 100 Free Hardware and to Win $14,000+ in Prizes!!
14 June 2022 11:04am
Join Seeed’s “IoT Into the Wild Contest for Sustainable Planet 2022” on Hackster to Get 100 Free Hardware and to Win $14,000+ in Prizes!!!
14 June 2022 9:14am
Video: Delivering edge computing on Robinson Crusoe Island (Chile) to preserve biodiversity
13 June 2022 2:08pm
Nutrient sensors - affordable, user-friendly, effective - do they exist?
26 April 2022 12:49pm
6 May 2022 7:08pm
Hi Samantha,
This looks like a really interesting and beneficial project. Wishing you all the best with it.
Are you scouting for sensors that are archival and deployed / recovered over set period of time, or do you need telemetry / daily / hourly data to monitor change from tethered buoys etc? We are working on a similar solution with another partner, although not with microfuid-based sensors, but there are similar barriers regarding cost reduction and data collection.
Kind regards,
Alasdair
12 May 2022 3:43pm
It sounds like you're looking for multiparameter probes to deploy in the water to log in situ readings as part of the baseline you want to establish, and you might be deploying BRUVs, doing video transects, or taking soundscapes in addition, if I'm not too far off the mark.
The multiparameter probes will run you around USD10k each, kitted for let's say pH, conductivity, DO, turbidity, nitrate, and temperature. If you can rent these probes and the manpower to run them, that may be the best option if local expertise is lacking, as there are subtle gotchas. You might want to look into an automatic winched system which raises and lowers the probe, so you get readings throughout the whole water column. This may not be much more expensive than having 3 probes (at surface, bottom, and mid-depth). Other advantages include reduced biofouling (since the probe parks in air) and potentially reduced maintenance load due to this. But the disadvantages include fishers tying up to the system and boats colliding with it, and birds pooping on it, all of which have happened to me.
4 June 2022 7:55pm
What exact nutrients or parameters are you trying to measure?
Post-doc in Multi-Sensor Fusion for Animal Biomechanics
1 June 2022 9:56am
UKAN+ Monitoring UK Biodiversity Symposium 15-16th June
31 May 2022 2:58pm
UCL East Light Fabrication Workshop Manager
31 May 2022 11:12am
WILDLABS Virtual Meetups Season Four: Tracking Progress
29 April 2022 9:57am
Join the Black Mammalogists Week Hackathon!
19 April 2022 12:00am
Spotting primates w/ thermal scope
7 April 2021 1:33am
14 April 2021 2:02pm
Thanks, Carly. I did see this and didn't glean much from it, if I'm honest. Some more specifics on features, prices and tradeoffs when selecting a unit would've been welcome.
14 April 2021 8:42pm
Yeah, it did seem fairly general, but figured I'd throw it in.
I just actually came across this on Twitter - https://twitter.com/ElieDoesEcology/status/1380708784050331651?s=20. Perhaps worth shooting the authors of this paper an email on what tech they used/any advice?
4 April 2022 3:02pm
Iray PH35. like a DV . thermal camera. 640*328,35mm. could make videos. 2400 USD, china product, easy ship to Vietnam.
1km is the range to check monkeys, It is better to connect with your laptop or iPad when you are looking for wildlife, big screen for a good view.
Apply now: Women in Conservation Technology Programme, Kenya
8 March 2022 12:00am
Opportunity: Graphic Designer
8 March 2022 12:00am
Scale with data logger
7 January 2022 4:25pm
18 January 2022 1:23pm
Hi,
Can you clarify what you mean by "does not work"?
If I were to guess, I'd say the firmware temperature compensation tables for the load cell tops out at 40 deg C (104 deg F). Everything else should still function to 70 deg C, which is the most common and most lax rating for electronic components.
If this is the case, then the scale probably still retains precision (output is repeatable) even if it is inaccurate (output is wrong-ish), so it's possible to calibrate it. This could be as simple as tabulating the measured weights of standard weight samples at different temperatures, to adjust the output of your scale in post processing. Unfortunately this means you also need to log the temperature, and you'd want to store the scale at close to ambient temperature so it quickly equilibrates (a good idea regardless) when you need to use it.
The race to save California's rarest butterflies
29 November 2021 12:00am
Choosing the right IoT connectivity solution
19 November 2021 12:00am
ECG/heart rate & body temperature sensor
13 October 2021 4:43pm
15 October 2021 9:51am
Hi Guy,
Sparkfun carry an ECG module, but I don't know if this will work with sheep/goats. They've got lots of temperature sensors too, but I would look into something like MAX30205 if you need accuracy.
5 November 2021 6:28pm
Do you mean the sensor itself (that you're going make a tag out of) or a datalogger that records heart rate (sensor incoporated into a tag already)? Vectronic make some good terrestrial animal physiological sensors.
(trial) Habitat use within enclosure
5 November 2021 2:20pm
Proximity detection in koalas
12 August 2021 8:20am
24 October 2021 4:45pm
A great proximity system you've developed @LuciKirkpatrick ! Amazing! I am curious how you deal with having tags in receive mode long enough to ensure a contact is logged? What's the chances of a contact being missed because a transmission doesn't overlap with a receiver being on? It seems like not very often given the comparison with camera trap data!
Thanks so much for sharing and looking forward to reading more about the build.
Cheers,
Rob
4 November 2021 9:15am
Hi @Rob+Appleby , thanks for your kind words about our system! We ge around this by ensuring that the tag is in receive mode at least as long as the pause between two proximity transmissions. There is still the odd chance that some interference occurs or two or more transmissions collide, but generally it is pretty reliable.
4 November 2021 12:26pm
Hi @LuciKirkpatrick
Aha! A great strategy. I thought it might have been a 'wake on radio' solution, but the overlapping wait time is a really nice solution. Again, a great solution and looking forward to more build details etc., as they arrive.
All the best,
Rob
Opportunity: μMoth v1.1 Group buy
4 November 2021 12:00am
Tech Tutors: How do I turn a conservation tech project into a product?
27 October 2021 11:23am
Technical Difficulties: Expect the Unexpected
27 October 2021 12:00am
29 June 2022 8:47pm
Realizing I'm hopping onto this thread late, but I think one of the easiest ways to handle batteries is simply to work to minimize energy consumption--identify areas where we can improve deployment duration while generating comparable ecological knowledge. For example, in the case of the acoustic sensors I work with, can we reduce sample rates and still pick up our species of interest? Can we use a sparser duty cycle while still generating sufficient information to answer whatever our relevant questions are?