Scientists turn ALBATROSSES into surveillance drones to help track illegal fishing boats
A team of researchers from the University of La Rochelle in France have converted albatrosses into de facto surveillance drones as part of a project to gather data on illegal fishing boats in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean. The team traveled to popular albatross nesting locations at Amsterdam Island and Kerguelen Island in the Indian Ocean north of Antarctica, and attached small sensors to 169 albatrosses in a procedure that took about 10 minutes per bird. The sensors weigh 65 grams, or around a seventh of a pound, and were equipped with a GPS receiver, a radar antenna, and a satellite communications monitor to track various boat communication systems. The devices were each powered by a small lithium battery that maintains a charge through a small solar panel, according to a report from ArsTechnica. The albatrosses covered more than 18 million square miles between East Africa and New Zealand, gathering data from more than 600,000 GPS locations.
Jan-31-2020, 00:59:36 GMT
- Country:
- Africa > East Africa (0.25)
- Antarctica > French Southern and Antarctic Lands
- Kerguelen Islands (0.27)
- Europe
- France (0.27)
- Netherlands > North Holland
- Amsterdam (0.27)
- Indian Ocean (0.49)
- Oceania > New Zealand (0.27)
- Industry:
- Food & Agriculture > Fishing (1.00)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots > Autonomous Vehicles > Drones (0.61)