birding-aus

Drones & birding

To: <>, <>
Subject: Drones & birding
From: <>
Date: Tue, 16 Oct 2012 16:09:05 +1100
Hi All, 

I guess the usefulness of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (Civil Aviation Safety 
Authority parlance for what we're talking about), depends, like anything, on 
your goal. If you wanted to count waders at, say, high tide roosts, I cannot 
imagine a better, less disturbing way than using a UAV. 

Cheers, 

Eric Vanderduys
Technical Officer
CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences
Phone: +61 7 4753 8529 | Fax: +61 7 4753 8600 | Mobile: 0437 330 961 
 | www.csiro.au | 
www.csiro.au/people/Eric.Vanderduys.html 
Address: CSIRO, PMB PO, Aitkenvale, Qld 4814. Deliveries: CSIRO, ATSIP, Bld 145 
James Cook Drive, James Cook University Douglas Campus, Townsville Qld 4814, 
AUSTRALIA 

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-----Original Message-----
From:  
 On Behalf Of Jeremy O'Wheel
Sent: Tuesday, 16 October 2012 2:25 PM
To: Peter Madvig
Cc: Birding Aus
Subject: Drones & birding

I wonder if some kind of remote controlled boat might be better for waders.
 Especially if you had something with a reasonably small motor, ensuring that 
it was both quiet and slow.  You could even disguise it as a duck.

Jeremy


On Tue, Oct 16, 2012 at 1:36 PM, Peter Madvig <> wrote:

> I remember a doco - possibly an Attenborough narated one, where a 
> motorised/mobile, artificial elephant dropping, was used to get close 
> up shots....it worked :-) Cheers, Peter Madvig
>



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