Human Wildlife Conflict

Making Waves: Open Hardware as a Solution to Scaling up Bycatch Mitigation

We discussed why we believe bycatch occurs, how open hardware and science solutions could help to better understand, monitor and mitigate bycatch, and how we could collectively infuse openness into marine conservation policy globally.

Progress report – February 2020 – Thermal imaging for human-wildlife conflict

Our idea for an alert system combines low-cost thermal sensors, machine learning and wireless transmission to build an affordable system that alerts communities to the presence of elephants, providing a chance to safely act before a human-elephant conflict (HEC)...

Progress report – January 2019 – Thermal imaging for human-wildlife conflict

Arribada recently returned from field sites in Assam, India where we tested the image quality and detection abilities of low-cost thermal sensors for detecting elephants in conflict areas. Arribada is working on these thermal cameras as a winner of the WWF and...

Progress report – December 2018 – Thermal imaging for human-wildlife conflict

Arribada just returned from our first thermal camera field trials in Greenland, where we tested the image quality and detection abilities of our chosen thermal sensors in an arctic climate, our prototype camera design and looked at real installation conditions and...