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Contacts:
Dr. Bob Fornaro,
919/515-7848
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Kathleen Angione
Nov.
6, 2003
Tiny
Sensor-Based Computers Could Help Track Wildlife
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Computer scientists at North Carolina
State University aren’t afraid of the big bad
wolf – instead they’re revolutionizing the
technology that tracks him. The NC State researchers
are studying how tiny, sensor-based computers can improve
wildlife tracking methods for red wolves in eastern
North Carolina.
Current tracking methods based solely on radio telemetry
are expensive, cumbersome and provide limited data,
said Dr. Robert Fornaro, professor of computer
science at NC State. Wildlife researchers can currently
track red wolves using radio collars, but this approach
doesn’t show the big picture, said Mark MacAllister
of the North Carolina Zoological Society. “Radio
telemetry helps us understand locations,” he said,
“but this new technology could help us understand
behaviors.”
Although red wolves are some of the most endangered
animals in the world, very little is known about their
pack dynamics. Since these tiny sensors can track location,
movement patterns and environmental conditions throughout
the day, researchers believe this new information could
shed some light on pack behavior. By placing these devices
on wolf collars, “We can find out who is hanging
out with whom,” MacAllister said.
Fornaro and colleagues from the N.C. Zoological Society
and the N.C. Zoological Park are searching for sources
of funding to support this research. But even as they
wait for funding, they continue to plan for a project
that requires sophisticated programming.
Wireless
sensor systems are becoming commercially available;
for example, Crossbow Technology markets a version called
“MICA Motes.” Powered by AA batteries, each
MICA Mote measures only 2x1x1 inches, but is programmable
and can be equipped with a global positioning system
(GPS) component, a tiny radio transmitter, and a sensor
board that detects light, temperature and acceleration.
Throughout
a given day, the GPS component would receive signals
from satellites to determine the longitude and latitude
of a specific wolf. At the same time, the sensor board
would take a reading of temperature and light, as well
as the wolf’s direction and acceleration. These
GPS and sensor readings would be stored on the wolf’s
collar. The on-board radio would transmit the animal’s
position to a computer base station nearby.
To accomplish this, Fornaro envisions
using the devices in another role – to build a
wireless network grid across areas of wildlife habitat
to act as a data collection mechanism.
“If 10 or 15 Motes were attached
to trees about every thousand feet, the grid could conceivably
cover an area of about one-half square mile,”
he said. Besides collecting and storing data, the Motes
on the wolf’s collar would also need to seek out
these data-collection Motes and off-load collar information
using its radio transceiver.
However, at certain times during the
day, both the collar Motes and the grid Motes need to
power down to conserve battery life. “So the wolf
collar is either awake or sleeping, and the grid element
is awake or sleeping,” he said. “Sometimes
we may get the wolf next to the grid, but both Motes
are asleep.”
This
is one of several programming kinks that Fornaro
and a Foundry Networks sponsored team of students
in the Computer Science Senior Design Center are
working on. Both he and MacAllister believe Motes
can improve tracking methods and supply wildlife
researchers with more useful data.
And such knowledge would prove enormously
helpful for projects such as the Red Wolf Recovery Program,
which works to restore wild red wolf populations in
eastern North Carolina.
Governed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (USFWS), the program has worked to restore wild
red wolf populations in eastern North Carolina since
1987. The current red wolf population totals 100.
MacAllister and Fornaro also ee MICA Mote technology
helping urban planners and wildlife researchers conduct
more complete environmental impact studies.
As the North Carolina Department of
Transportation (NCDOT) plans to move forward to widen
Highway 64 in Dare and Hyde counties – home of
the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge and prime
red wolf habitat – Motes could be used to determine
wolf activity patterns in the vicinity of the roadway.
By understanding these patterns, researchers will be
able to better predict the impact a wider highway would
have on interaction among packs or red wolf fatalities
caused by automobiles.
“In either case, the new data
can only expand our understanding of the lives and habits
of our red wolf neighbors,” Fornaro said.
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angione -
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