IoT helping Filipino fisherman to save sea mammals
IoT and Android app helps Filipino fisherman save mammals
IoT and Android app helps Filipino fisherman save mammals

IoT helping Filipino fisherman to save sea mammals

Citizen science uploads data to the cloud to save sea cows from extinction

Fishermen in the Philippines have been drafted in to help protect a type of marine mammal from extinction using IoT, smartphones and the cloud.

The conservation project, managed by Smart Earth Network (SEN) and C3 (Community Centred Conservation), uses IoT platform provided by Kii – a Japanese start-up which Cisco invested in last week.

Fishermen, during their voyages out to sea, use an Android app on smartphones provided to them by the project to take pictures of dugong (or sea cows). These images are then uploaded via the app alongside GPS data to locate sightings.

Sea cows are marine mammals that live in the oceans around East Africa to the Western Pacific, but are now listed by the World Conservation Union, IUCN as a species vulnerable to extinction. While legally protected, dugongs face many dangers, largely from local fishing, destruction of habitat and illegal hunting.

“Traditionally, we have had to track these amazing sea creatures from the air, which is expensive and not entirely reliable,” according to Chris Poonian at C3, a non-profit organisation.

“Using smartphones to monitor endangered species is an innovative and novel approach. This collaborative project is one of the first initiatives of its kind to employ smartphone technology. If successful, these approaches could have important applications for surveys of rare species throughout the world.

“Citizen science is a growing field to monitor endangered species with limited resources. The smartphone app we are developing and trailing could potentially be used to monitor any species anywhere in the world, and generate useful scientific data from non-specialist observers. It also means we can engage with the local community and involve the fishermen who are the ones out at sea and closest to the dugongs, which is very rewarding.”

The project involves around 30 fishermen have already been handed basic smartphones, supplied by local mobile provider, Cherry Mobile, as part of a trial in the Busuanga region of the country. Once out at sea, the fishermen photograph any dugongs they spot and then upload the images when they are back on land to a central database hosted on the Kii Cloud, using a simple app developed by SEN. The fishermen, many of whom are unable to read or write, are being trained on how to use the smartphones and provided with local charging facilities.

Each image will indicate the location of each dugong via GPS, allowing C3 to map the sightings and get a clear idea of the population in the area, timings of sightings, migration patterns, etc, and will enable the team to put together recommendations for future protection areas. The plan is to share the data with other conservationists worldwide, and also with the local Council of Development to help C3 lobby the local government.

IoT reduces conservation expenditure

Simon Hodgkinson, founder of SEN, which provides a platform for conservationists and technologists to share ideas, network and develop innovative solutions, believes the idea is a simple but effective one: “New mobile technology and particularly Internet of Things is helping to take the expense and legwork out of conservation, especially in the more remote parts of the world. While this project is in its infancy, the feedback from the local community has been very positive and we are already seeing early results from the data.”

Fred de Haro, CEO at PyCom, told Internet of Business that IoT applications are evolving to combine greater use of networks for both consumers and businesses.

“This application of fishermen using smartphones to monitor sea life is a good example of how traditional cellular networks could be mixed with new LPWAN networks to ensure constant connectivity throughout patchy areas,” he said.

“Multi-bearer solutions are enabling consumers and businesses to drive maximum value (and satisfaction) from their application irrespective of where they find themselves. Whether navigating the coastal regions of their countries or within isolated country locations. Ultimately, reliable IoT puts the power back in the hands of the fishermen.”