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Journal ArticleDOI

New Eyes on the World: Advanced Sensors for Ecology

TLDR
The opportunities for sensor systems and, in particular, sensor networks are just beginning to be realized, with much more work to be done, including formulation of new questions, development of new sensors, better software, and new ways for researchers to work together across large distances.
Abstract
Innovative uses of advanced sensors and sensor networks are starting to be translated into new ecological knowledge. These sensors are providing a new set of “eyes” through which researchers may observe the world in new ways, extend spatial and temporal scales of observation, more accurately estimate what cannot be observed, and, most important, obtain unexpected results or develop new paradigms. Automated sensors are widely deployed by members of the Organization of Biological Field Stations, yet some needs—particularly for chemical and biological sensors—are not currently being met. There are additional opportunities for developing sensor networks at synoptic, regional, continental, and global scales. Although we are seeing more uses of sensor systems and, in particular, sensor networks, the opportunities for these systems are just beginning to be realized, with much more work to be done, including formulation of new questions, development of new sensors, better software, and new ways for researchers to...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Robots for Environmental Monitoring: Significant Advancements and Applications

TL;DR: This article collates and discusses the significant advancements and applications of marine, terrestrial, and airborne robotic systems developed for environmental monitoring during the last two decades.
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Ecoinformatics: supporting ecology as a data-intensive science.

TL;DR: The state-of-the-art and recent advances in ecoinformatics that can benefit ecologists and environmental scientists as they tackle increasingly challenging questions that require voluminous amounts of data across disciplines and scales of space and time are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Derivation of lake mixing and stratification indices from high-resolution lake buoy data

TL;DR: The Lake Analyzer program provides a program suite and best practices for the comparison of mixing and stratification indices in lakes across gradients of climate, hydro-physiography, and time, and enables a more detailed understanding of the resulting biogeochemical transformations at different spatial and temporal scales.
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Real-time bioacoustics monitoring and automated species identification

TL;DR: The acoustical component of the Automated Remote Biodiversity Monitoring Network (ARBIMON), a novel combination of hardware and software for automating data acquisition, data management, and species identification based on audio recordings, is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perspectives on the use of landscape genetics to detect genetic adaptive variation in the field

TL;DR: Major challenges and future research directions for correlating environmental factors with molecular markers to identify adaptive genetic variation are outlined, and research gaps in the application of landscape genetics to real‐world problems arising from global change are pointed to.
References
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Book

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or, The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life

TL;DR: The "Penguin Classics" edition of "On the Origin of Species" as discussed by the authors contains an introduction and notes by William Bynum, and features a cover designed by Damien Hirst.
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Habitat monitoring with sensor networks

TL;DR: These networks deliver to ecologists data on localized environmental conditions at the scale of individual organisms to help settle large-scale land-use issues affecting animals, plants, and people as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The autonomous underwater glider "Spray"

TL;DR: In this paper, a small (50-kg, 2-m long) underwater vehicle with operating speeds of 20-30 cm/s and ranges up to 6000 km has been developed and field tested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modifying the ‘pulse–reserve’ paradigm for deserts of North America: precipitation pulses, soil water, and plant responses

TL;DR: The analyses indicate that rainfall variability is best understood in terms of sequences of rainfall events that produce biologically-significant ‘pulses’ of soil moisture recharge, as opposed to individual rain events.
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