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Technology boosts efforts
to protect mountain gorillas,
rebuild Rwandan economy
John Toon
Research News and Publications
A partnership involving conservation organizations and Georgia Tech researchers is
bringing new technology to bear on efforts to protect the endangered mountain gorillas
popularized by the movie Gorillas in the Mist. The effort will put remote sensing
technology into the hands of field scientists and trackers working to protect the
gorillas, while helping the African nation of Rwanda rebuild its national university
and recover from a devastating 1994 war and genocide.
The project, which carries on the work of naturalist Dian Fossey, will also demonstrate
how advanced technologies can help in the struggle to protect other endangered species.
Our first goal is to use modern-day technology to bring new clout to field conservation,
ecosystem management and endangered species protection, said Clare Richardson, president
of the Atlanta-based Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International. Because we are a field
conservation organization, it is imperative that we aggressively pursue more efficient
ways to collect data, then have experts available to analyze that data, especially as
it applies to habitat.
Habitat loss poses the single greatest threat to the mountain gorillas, Richardson
said. The most densely populated nation in Africa, Rwanda is struggling with the task
of resettling more than a million people in the aftermath of war. The need for more
crop land, as well as timber for homes and cooking, threatens the protected reserves
and introduces human disease into the fragile gorilla habitat in the Virungas Mountain
Range area.
The first applications of the new technology, therefore, will be to assess the
existing gorilla habitat, said Nickolas Faust, principal research scientist at the
Georgia Tech Research Institute. Georgia Tech researchers will work with H. Dieter
Steklis, chief scientist for the Fossey Fund, to combine geographic information
system (GIS) data from satellites with hyperspectral data gathered by a special
aerial camera and demographic information recorded on the ground. That will give
the researchers and Rwandan authorities a measure of how many gorillas the area
can support and establish a baseline for documenting future habitat loss.
The carrying capacity of the area can be assessed by examining the quantity of
preferred gorilla food, Steklis said. Based on that, we can determine how many
gorillas the habitat can sustain. This would provide the park authorities with
information that would help them manage the National Park.
Slightly more than 600 mountain gorillas survive in Central East Africa, ranging
across national parks controlled by three different nations: Rwanda, the Democratic
Republic of Congo and Uganda. Security concerns in the border region over the
last few years curtailed regular patrols of the gorilla habitat, but the trackers
and scientists from the Fossey Funds Karisoke Nature Center are back in the
Virungas with armed escorts.
The trackers will soon receive additional training to use the new technology.
Working with researchers and field scientists, they will break new ground in combining
GIS data with global positioning system (GPS) technology and wireless communications.
Ultimately, wireless communications systems tied into the Internet will allow quick
transfer of data from field scientists to researchers anywhere in the world.
The idea of tying GIS, GPS and communications together is a fairly new concept
that we hope to explore through this collaboration, Faust said. We will be
bringing in technology that hasnt traditionally been used in field conservation.
The partnership may also get help from the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA), whose Digital Earth initiative seeks to make the agencys
vast data resource, powerful imaging tools and 25 years of expertise available to
field scientists.
Using GIS and other data, Georgia Tech created a virtual Virungan environment on
campus, using a three-screen projector system that allows visitors to immerse
themselves in a three-dimensional simulation. By allowing a group of people to
share the experience of moving through the ecosystem and examining its components,
the system offers a powerful tool for visualizing the potential impacts of change,
Faust added.
Though the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund focuses on conservation of the gorillas, the
well-being of the animals cannot be separated from the well-being of the country
in which they live. For that reason, the partnership has taken on broader goals.
We would also like to take certain elements of these technology applications to
the countries in which we work so that we are building scientific and technical
infrastructure there, said Richardson. Ultimately, we want to have centers for
GIS and remote sensing dotted all around the globe.
To further that goal, Faust and collaborators at Georgia Techs Center for
Geographic Information Systems recently spent five weeks teaching two officials
from the National University of Rwanda about GIS and remote sensing. Back at their
university, the Rwandans will pass on their knowledge to faculty and students via
GIS workstations provided by Georgia Tech through the Georgia Research Alliance.
We will set up the first center for GIS and remote sensing at the university, and
our goal will be to train others in this new technology, said Safari Bonfils, dean
of science and engineering at the National University of Rwanda. The students will
use this technology for applications in agriculture, social science and the sciences.
This will be very helpful for our country, especially for planners in the government
ministries.
Future plans call for collaboration with Zoo Atlanta to share knowledge gained from
the research with broader audiences.
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