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
- @Eric24
- | he/him
Georgia Institute of Technology
PhD student in Computer Science specializing in sensing and wireless communications for social good
- 0 Resources
- 7 Discussions
- 1 Groups
I am a budding engineer doing Electrical and Telecommunications Engineering and I am passionate about innovation and technology and how I can use it to make an impact in society.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 5 Groups
- @Andrew_Hill
- | He/Him
Open Acoustic Devices
I am co-founder of Open Acoustic Devices, the creators of AudioMoth and HydroMoth. My background is Electronic Engineering and Computer Science.
- 0 Resources
- 4 Discussions
- 2 Groups
- @alex_rogers
- | He/him/his
University of Oxford
I am a Professor of Computer Science at the University of Oxford where I work on developing novel low-cost conservation technology (including AudioMoth and SnapperGPS).
- 0 Resources
- 14 Discussions
- 3 Groups
- @tkswanson
- | she/her
San Diego Zoo Global
Research Coordinator II for the Conservation Technology Lab at SDZWA
- 1 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 6 Groups
M.A.P Scientific Services
Co-founder and Director of M.A.P Scientific Services, South Africa
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 8 Groups
Georgia Institute of Technology
Grad Student
- 0 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 7 Groups
Zoological Society London (ZSL)
Technical Project Manager in ZSL's Conservation Technology Unit
- 0 Resources
- 26 Discussions
- 6 Groups
A Marine Conservationist based in Malaysia
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 5 Groups
Early-career movement ecologist currently working with an interdisciplinary team to develop and deploy animal-borne tracking devices with the interest of monitoring and studying the fine-scale behaviors of large carnivores, particularly in the context of human wildlife conflict
- 0 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 10 Groups
- @jcbotsch
- | he/him
I'm a population and community ecologist studying the effects of global change on insect populations.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 6 Groups
Natural Solutions
Engineer, Ph.D in Computation Ecology. Interested in developing tools for the massive acquisition of high dimensional data from new technologies (e.g., imaging, omics), their analysis and visualization.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 13 Groups
June 2023
event
May 2023
event
Tech Tutors: Creating Custom Hardware with Arduino
12 August 2020 1:26am
1 September 2020 11:44am
Hi Maxine.
I totally missed this post, but we'll be doing office hours once we kick off the Arduino series. In regards to your questions, at this moment, I don't see any environment to program the Audiomoth using the Arduino IDE and platform. You'd have to use a standard toolchain to program them which may be a bit daunting. I also haven't spent much time with Edge Impulse so I can't really comment on it.
It sounds like you're looking for a smart way to trigger your "audio trap" to record during a specific event. There may actually be a few potential solutions, especially if you are looking for human hunters. This could consist of motion detection, sound level detection, sound frequency detection (ie: chainsaws), photointerruption (think a chime when entering a shop), or many other ways. Perhaps we can discuss during one of the office hours. Or if you want to start a separate thread, it may be a good opportunity to brainstorm potential solutions.
Hope that helps.
Akiba
2 September 2020 11:28am
Hi Akiba
No worries, thanks for responding!
I'd love to delve into more detail on this once the new series has started and I have an idea of the tools and kit required! I think what you're proposing sounds like a real space and energy saver on the machines so very excited about this!
I'll look out for the series launch and definitely be in touch! :)
Thank you so much!
Maxine
Tech Tutors: How do I build bespoke conservation technology?
29 July 2020 9:06pm
20 August 2020 2:51pm
Hi Nigel
When talking about using switched regulators, does using e.g. 12V batteries with a 5V output extend the battery life or only slowly release the power so it doesn't short the device? I understand life-span is more to do with capacity and this is usually higher with voltage... but that's as far as my battery knowledge goes!
Any guidance would be greatly appreciated, thanks!
Maxine
21 August 2020 3:27pm
Hi Maxine,
A switched regulator rather than a fixed one doesn't use as much power trying to maintain a constant voltage. Most USB driven equipment will have internal power circuitry to reduce this further for the 3.3V etc that most chips require, so that if there are fluctuations in the 5V supply are of little consequence. This weblink gives you an explanation.
https://www.renesas.com/sg/en/products/power-management/linear-vs-switching-regulators.html
We built our own regulators at one stage but found the off the shelf ones that I highlighted in the talk generally only use an additional 5mA of current which on most remote solar/battery operating system is negligible.
Remember: Power in Watts= Volts x Amps so you will see less current drawn from your battery at higher voltage. Battery capacites are given in Ah or mAh which is the current multiplied by the operating time in hours.
Hope this helps and good luck with your work
Nigel
28 August 2020 4:43pm
Hi Maxine,
There are pros and cons to switching regulators and linear regulators. Linear regulators "throw away" the excess voltage in order to maintain a constant output voltage. This is wasteful, but on the plus side when the equipment is asleep then the linear regulator draws only microamps. A switching regulator is as high as 95+% efficient when running close to it's rated output, but when the equipment is asleep the quiescent draw might be in the milliamp range (1000x higher).
So linear regulators do best when they are powering equipment that sleeps a lot, and switchers do well otherwise, but you'd still need to do the sums. In general, switchers are most efficient when input and output voltages are not wildly different and the load is drawing not less than 5% of the rated current. Switchers can also be noisy, in the electrical sense. This can affect the quality of the data obtained, so some testing should be done. Choosing a switching regulator is more involved than choosing a linear regulator.
Thanks,
-harold
Designing a Camera Mount with FLIR and WWF
24 August 2020 12:00am
Laure Joanny Reviews: Tech Tutors' How Do I Repair My Camera Traps?
20 August 2020 12:00am
7 October 2022 6:13pm
Sustainable Fishing Challenges: Fishing Gear Innovations
19 August 2020 12:00am
Challenge: ElephantEdge
11 August 2020 12:00am
Metal Detecting Sensors for Anti-Poaching
10 August 2020 12:00am
Tech Tutors Recording: How do I get started with Arduino?
10 August 2020 12:00am
Sustainable Fishing Challenges: Fishing Vessels of the Future
4 August 2020 12:00am
How do I use portable genomics in the field?
3 August 2020 12:00am
Event: StreamingScience's #Tech4Wildlife Thursdays
3 August 2020 12:00am
Tracking Wild Reptiles, Amphibians, And Their Temperatures
31 July 2020 12:00am
15 September 2023 11:02pm
16 October 2023 4:07pm
OpenCollar Update 2
7 May 2019 12:49pm
1 June 2019 12:14pm
Cool stuff Laurens! I'm closely following the open collar developments which triggers some ideas on what we could do for the river dolphins. Look forward to connect shortly! Cheers
28 August 2019 11:18am
Hey Laurens,
How did your field tests in Rwanda go?
Steph
30 July 2020 4:04am
Hi. I've been following the opencollar initiative and was wondering what the current status is. The project looks amazing!
How do I use a drone to capture radio-tracking data?
27 July 2020 12:00am
New article: Bridge et al. 2019 An Arduino-Based RFID Platform for Animal Research
17 July 2019 2:13pm
18 July 2019 2:33am
@TedHowardNZ is this something you could use?
18 July 2019 4:40am
Looks interesting.
Will explore more deeply when I have some more time.
Thanks very much
23 July 2020 11:16am
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, though: USD139.
Note that these are NOT sold by Eli's team: Eli made the design open-source so LabMaker updated and produced some.
Yvan
Interest in group order of ETag RFID readers
5 December 2019 8:05pm
23 July 2020 11:13am
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
How do I build bespoke conservation technology?
20 July 2020 12:00am
Training Opportunity: Durrell Conservation Academy
16 July 2020 12:00am
How do I repair my camera traps?
13 July 2020 12:00am
Kākāpō Dreaming: A Wildlife Drones Adventure
8 July 2020 12:00am
Era of the Condor: A Species' Future in Recovery (Part 3)
2 July 2020 12:00am
Era of the Condor: A Species' Future in Recovery (Part 2)
25 June 2020 12:00am
Seeking research projects related to monitoring wildlife behavior
20 June 2020 3:34pm
22 June 2020 8:54pm
Hi Ben!
I think we've had correspondence on Twitter in the past, but can't remember for sure... Anyways, I'm a primatology PhD student and do fieldwork in Madagascar studying lemurs (specifically Ranomafana National Park). My dissertation is on lemur vocal communication, but I am doing an applied chapter focused on passive acoustic monitoring as well. I've tested out a bunch of different PAM devices (ARU's-autonomous recording units) e.g., SongMeter, Swift, AudioMoth and am currently annotating call files and prepping a training dataset that I hope to begin using with an ML model to identify species-specific calls. Vocals are a great use-case with behavior and tech as you can sometimes ID contexts, individuals, etc based on acoustic structure or usage which would be really cool (albeit very complicated) to incorporate.
Also have some experience with camera-traps, and the area I work in in Mada is part of the TEAM network so I'm hoping to incorporate camera-traps and ARUs in the same area. I work with local researchers and students (via the Malagasy-run Centre ValBio research station) and am looking to develop community-led initiatives as well so I've got the low-cost, open-source interest as well.
I'll stop typing an essay now, but definitely would love to chat!! Feel free to message me on Twitter or email me ([email protected]).
23 June 2020 1:56am
I'd love to chat more! I'll be reaching out soon!
From Autonomous Cars to Aqualink: Developing a Reef Monitoring System
9 June 2020 12:00am
Event: Arm’s AI Virtual Tech Sessions
9 June 2020 12:00am
Innovator Interview: Hack the Poacher
4 June 2020 12:00am
Webinar: The Next Generation Of Animal Telemetry
1 June 2020 12:00am
Competition: 2020 Hackaday Prize
26 May 2020 12:00am
WILDLABS Tech Tutors: Season One
19 May 2020 12:00am
Grassroots Innovations for Wildlife Conservation
19 May 2020 12:00am
19 August 2020 2:23pm
Hey Akiba
Super excited for the talk tomorrow, I've only just discovered Arduino so I'm really keen to learn more!
I would be very grateful for any advice regarding using Arduino to programme AudioMoths. I'm potentially interested in exploring Arduino as I understand the Arduino Nano 33 BLE can be used to download self-taught models created on Edge Impulse?
Do you have any experience with Arduino used with Edge Impulse models? Due to 24hr activity of my subjects (human hunters), I need the AudioMoths 'listening' 24hrs, but ideally to save battery they will only be programmed to 'record' when identifying the correct sounds using trained data. Deployment will be 5 months in dense Amazon rainforest so getting the AudioMoths programmed for long durations would be incredible!
I'd appreciate any thoughts on this, thank you again!
Maxine