Archive for May, 2026

Could New Tech Help Save Some Very Rare Whales?

Courtesy of the New York Times, a look at how innovative systems to keep ships from hitting North Atlantic right whales are coming into use. The Trump administration is weighing whether they can replace a bedrock protection. Trackers that ping satellites every time a whale surfaces for air. Thermal cameras that can detect the animals […]

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We Can Now Track Animals From Space. Here’s Why It Matters.

Via BBC, a look at how we can now track animal panic from space and why it matters: After decades of development, wildlife surveillance has finally come of age. The new Icarus satellite is tracking signals hidden in animal behaviour – which could save the lives of cheetahs, rhinos and elephants. On a blustery morning […]

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Fin-Tech: How Sharks Could Sharpen Ocean Forecasts

Via Anthropocene, an interesting look at how sensors strapped to 19 sharks off America’s east coast cut errors in a leading climate model by as much as 43%: The vast ocean dwarfs our efforts to understand it. Sensor-laden buoys, high-flying satellites and sophisticated computer models can only do so much to plumb the depths of the waters […]

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Internet of Animals: How Tracking Animal Movement May Save the Planet

Via MIT’s Technology Review, a look at how researchers have been dreaming of an Internet of Animals. They’re getting closer to monitoring 100,000 creatures—and revealing hidden facets of our shared world. There was something strange about the way the sharks were moving between the islands of the Bahamas. Tiger sharks tend to hug the shoreline, […]

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Networked Nature
New technical innovations such as location-tracking devices, GPS and satellite communications, remote sensors, laser-imaging technologies, light detection and ranging” (LIDAR) sensing, high-resolution satellite imagery, digital mapping, advanced statistical analytical software and even biotechnology and synthetic biology are revolutionizing conservation in two key ways: first, by revealing the state of our world in unprecedented detail; and, second, by making available more data to more people in more places. The mission of this blog is to track these technical innovations that may give conservation the chance – for the first time – to keep up with, and even get ahead of, the planet’s most intractable environmental challenges. It will also examine the unintended consequences and moral hazards that the use of these new tools may cause.Read More