*EPF313 11/17/2004
Text: Endangered Species Could Be Counted, Tracked From Space
(NASA helps wildlife society test satellite-based animal counting) (520)

NASA is helping scientists with the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) count their zoo animals from space, according to a November 17 WCS press release.

Using high-tech cameras fixed to a privately owned orbiting Quickbird satellite 280 miles above Earth, a WCS scientific team tallied some of the zoo's own animal collection to see if satellites could help count wildlife populations in remote locations worldwide. The project was funded in part by a grant from NASA.

So far, everything from giraffes to Thomson's gazelles have been spotted with startling clarity. If the technology proves accurate, WCS may use it to monitor endangered wildlife populations that live in hard-to-reach locations.

Text of the Wildlife Conservation Society press release follows:

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Wildlife Conservation Society
Press release, November 17, 2004

Elephants in space

NEW YORK -- (Nov. 17, 2004) Scientists with the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) have recently been counting their zoo animals from a lofty perch: namely, outer space. Using high-tech cameras fixed to an orbiting satellite 280 miles overhead, a WCS scientific team tallied some of the zoo's own animal collection to see if satellites can help count wildlife populations in remote locations throughout the world.

The WCS team is currently analyzing high-tech maps produced by the satellite, which orbited the zoo last Wednesday, Nov. 10th. So far, everything from giraffes to Thomson's gazelles have been spotted with startling clarity. If the technology proves accurate, WCS is hopeful that it can be used to monitor endangered wildlife populations that live in hard-to-reach locations.

Dr. Eric Sanderson, a WCS landscape ecologist who is managing the study said, "Imagine being able to monitor a herd of elephants in the Serengeti, or a flock of endangered flamingos in Bolivia, from a lab in New York. This technology may allow us to do just that."

"This experiment is another powerful example of how WCS can use its world-class zoos in New York City to help save wildlife living half a world away," said Richard L. Lattis, General Director of WCS's zoos and aquarium.

The satellite, called Quickbird, is owned by DigitalGlobe, a private company. WCS plans to use similar imagery to count wildlife in exotic locations, including elephants and giraffes in Tanzania, flamingos in South America, and elk, bison and antelope in Wyoming. WCS scientists will analyze those images as well to compare counts of wildlife living in other wild places. The project was funded in part by a grant from NASA.

According to members of Dr. Sanderson's team, the detail of the images taken from so far away has been particularly impressive. "We're counting individual gazelles in the zoo's African Plains exhibit from a satellite 280 miles up," said Dr. Scott Bergen. "That's like standing on top of the Empire State Building and spotting a deer in Maine."

WCS, the Bronx Zoo's parent organization, currently operates more that 350 field conservation projects in 54 countries around the world.

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(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)

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