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The internet of animals : discovering the collective intelligence of life on Earth / Martin Wikelski ; foreword by Keith Gaddis.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Vancouver ; Berkeley ; London : Greystone Books, [2024]Description: xi, 244 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781771649599
  • 1771649593
Subject(s):
Contents:
Foreword / by Keith Gaddis -- Prologue: A sea lion named baby Caruso -- From the prairie to space and back -- The bird information highway -- A little ovenbird makes us think again -- The early days of tracking -- Walking like a cowboy -- Our Sputnik moment -- Rats! Still so much to learn -- The long march to ICARUS -- Switching back to Europe -- Who's in charge? -- The ICARUS design starts -- Tagging animals in the field -- Getting closer to launch -- Finally, we have liftoff -- The rocky road of tag development -- All systems go-or not -- Animals at play -- Putin invades Ukraine --Cosmic ideas from Aristotle to Humboldt -- Berta, the earthquake cow -- The internet of animals -- Epilogue: ICARUS flies faster, farther -- Afterword: A glance into a bright future -- Acknowledgments --Appendix: Initial ICARUS projects -- Index.
Summary: "All we need to do is give animals a voice and our perception of the world could change forever. That's what author Martin Wikelski and his team of scientists believe, and this book shares their story for the first time. As they tag animals around the world with minuscule tracking devices, they link their movements to The International Space Station, which taps into the 'internet of animals': an astonishing network of information made up of thousands of animals communicating with each other and their environments. Called the International Cooperation for Animal Research Using Space, or ICARUS, this phenomenal project is poised to change our world. Down on the ground, Wikelski describes animals' sixth sense first-hand. Farm animals become restless when earthquakes are imminent. Animals on the African plains sense when poachers are on the move. Frigatebirds in South America depart before hurricanes arrive."-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Dr. James Carlson Library On Order Processing
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library On Order Processing
Adult Book Adult Book Northport Library On Order Processing
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:


An illuminating account of animal migration and the stunning new science that reveals the source of their infinite, untapped knowledge.

What do animals know that we don't? Why do rats flee before an earthquake and birds before a hurricane? In The Internet of Animals , renowned scientist Martin Wikelski convincingly argues that animals possess a unique "sixth sense" that humans are only beginning to grasp ...

All we need to do is give animals a voice and our perception of the world could change forever. That's what author Martin Wikelski and his team of scientists believe and this book shares their story for the first time. As they tag animals around the world with miniscule tracking devices, they link their movements to a space station that taps into the 'internet of animals': an astonishing network of information made up of thousands of animals communicating with each other and their environments. Called the International Cooperation for Animal Research Using Space, or ICARUS, this phenomenal project is poised to change our world.

Down on the ground, Wikelski describes animals' sixth sense first-hand. On Africa's Serengeti plains, he watches columns of migrating wildebeests and zebras stretching 50 miles long, with each animal knowing the quality of grass consumed at the front of the line--even those straggling behind. In South America, Flamingoes head south just when they sense the weather changing thousands of miles away in the Andes. And in Angola, a flock of cuckoos meet only to separate--one going to the UK, one to Western Russia, and the other to Mongola--based on unique information about each destination.

As Wikelski shares his deep love of animals and what they can tell us, he describes each group's unique culture. Yes, animals have culture, just like humans. Their migratory rhythms are not triggered by genes encoded in their DNA but by elaborate cultures that are long established. What does this mean for us? It means that, by paying attention to animal cultures, we can learn more about our environments. We can better prepare for natural disasters, such as earthquakes, floods, and hurricanes. Most of all, we can learn to live alongside animals in harmony for the betterment of our future, their future, and the future of the planet.

Includes index.

Foreword / by Keith Gaddis -- Prologue: A sea lion named baby Caruso -- From the prairie to space and back -- The bird information highway -- A little ovenbird makes us think again -- The early days of tracking -- Walking like a cowboy -- Our Sputnik moment -- Rats! Still so much to learn -- The long march to ICARUS -- Switching back to Europe -- Who's in charge? -- The ICARUS design starts -- Tagging animals in the field -- Getting closer to launch -- Finally, we have liftoff -- The rocky road of tag development -- All systems go-or not -- Animals at play -- Putin invades Ukraine --Cosmic ideas from Aristotle to Humboldt -- Berta, the earthquake cow -- The internet of animals -- Epilogue: ICARUS flies faster, farther -- Afterword: A glance into a bright future -- Acknowledgments --Appendix: Initial ICARUS projects -- Index.

"All we need to do is give animals a voice and our perception of the world could change forever. That's what author Martin Wikelski and his team of scientists believe, and this book shares their story for the first time. As they tag animals around the world with minuscule tracking devices, they link their movements to The International Space Station, which taps into the 'internet of animals': an astonishing network of information made up of thousands of animals communicating with each other and their environments. Called the International Cooperation for Animal Research Using Space, or ICARUS, this phenomenal project is poised to change our world. Down on the ground, Wikelski describes animals' sixth sense first-hand. Farm animals become restless when earthquakes are imminent. Animals on the African plains sense when poachers are on the move. Frigatebirds in South America depart before hurricanes arrive."-- Provided by publisher.

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