When the next pandemic threat looms, help may come from an unexpected source: wild animals. In a new study led by Prof. Ran Nathan from the Movement Ecology Lab at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, ...
Movement is ubiquitous across the natural world. All organisms move, actively or passively, regularly or during specific life stages, to meet energy, survival, reproductive and social demands.
Recent advances in wildlife tracking techniques have enabled large-scale data collection on the detailed movements of many animal species. The application of these approaches has revealed new insights ...
The Motus Wildlife Tracking System has put nearly 50,000 incredibly lightweight radio transmitters on birds, bats and insects. We caught up with an ornithologist to learn more about where these ...
A new visual AI system can automatically find, identify, and follow individual animals in video footage across nearly 100 wildlife species. The technology could transform conservation monitoring, but ...
Imagine stepping outside your house and realizing you are never truly alone. A pigeon sits on a telephone wire across the street. A squirrel runs along a fence. A deer watches from the edge of a ...
LAKE PLACID — The first Motus wildlife tracking system in the central Adirondacks will be located at Uihlein Farm in Lake Placid. Motus wildlife tracking systems are a network of towers that track ...
SAN FRANCISCO BAY -- Bay Area scientists are using cutting-edge technology to better understand the decline in bird populations while finding ways to help species that are challenged. In the past 50 ...
LAKE PLACID — Lake Placid’s Uihlein Foundation announces that the first Motus Wildlife Tracking System in the Central Adirondacks will be located at Uihlein Farm in Lake Placid. A ribbon-cutting will ...