areas we help protect
Sensing Clues currently strengthens the protection of 4.787.244 hectare of nature. We aim at protecting 10 million hectare before 2023. Below are a few examples of “stories from the field“, that illustrate a few of the services we are offering.
To enlarge our impact, the Wildlife tool suite (Wits) is free of charge. Users only pay a cost-recovering fee for support. Licenses and hosting services are all donated by our Solution Partners.
To further drive down the cost of support we need people and companies who want to do good.
Contact us if you feel challenged to contribute!
Save the Tiger Project, Nepal
We interviewed Keith of Wildlife Works during our trip to Kenia. Learn how the Cluey app changed the way they operate and is making their work a lot easier and safer, check out the video.
Check out this update from Rewilding Apennines on Facebook about the pilot they conducted with Cluey Data Collector.
Last November we were happy to announce that PhD-researcher D.P Srivastava started using the Sensing Clues Wildlife Intelligence Tools Suite to collect and analyse data of tigers in and around the Bhopal city in India. The study aims to understand the situation of tiger presence and survival near the urban landscape of Bhopal City. With the research a few months underway we spoke with D.P for an update.
India is home to circa 2967 Bengal tigers, which accounts for 70% of the worlds wild tigers population (AITE, 2019). More than 1000 of these tigers live in human-dominated landscapes, outside protected nature reserves. PhD-researcher D.P Srivastava is using a bio-social approach to investigate the prospects of tiger survival in and around Bhopal city. Learn more about D.P Srivastava’s research.
The Apennine Mountains is a large mountain range in central Italy. Its most famous resident is the Marsican brown bear. Together with the experts of Rewilding Europe, Sensing Clues will be working on improving knowledge about the whereabouts and activities of the Marsican brown bear.