Animal bouncers next step in wildlife conservation
2 Articles
2 Articles
Animal bouncers next step in wildlife conservation
Woylie travels through SmartGate. Credit: © Australian Wildlife Conservancy Wildlife ecologists and IT experts at the Australian Wildlife Conservancy have put their heads together to develop cutting-edge technology that may allow native animals to come and go from fenced reserves as they please, while keeping feral predators at bay. The first tests of “SmartGate” were done on woylies, or brush-tailed bettongs. Tamar wallabies weren’t so cooperat…
Normandy: The Wildlife Route application aims to protect wild animals crossing roads
Since the beginning of 2025, Wildlife Route has been able to report animals killed on roads in Normandy. The data collected will be used to determine which places are most dangerous to wildlife, and to develop them accordingly.
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