The Surprising Stories Revealed by GPS Animal Tagging

/where-the-wild-things-go

  • Where the Wild Things Go - Issue 51: Limits
    http://nautil.us/issue/51/limits/where-the-wild-things-go

    Elephants When I sat down with Iain Douglas-Hamilton at his home in Nairobi to learn how he went from deploying the first radio collars on elephants in 1968 to deploying the first GPS collars on them in 1995, he told me about an elephant named Parsitau. “We put a prototype on him and it lasted for all of 10 days, and we thought this was absolutely the cat’s whiskers.” Recording four locations per day, those 40 GPS points were the first ever recorded on an animal in Africa. “It was so incredible,” Douglas-Hamilton recalled. “Here was a collar that would go across international borders, work by day, by night, inside forest, outside forest, up hills, down hills.” Plus, GPS was far more precise than radio or traditional Argos satellite tracking.Early Adopters: In March 2016, Save The Elephants (...)