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Student Research Drone Project May Save Whales

A student-led research team is taking the drone concept to the high seas to save beleaguered sperm whales.

Search and Help Aquatic Mammals UAS (SHAMU – yes like the famous whale) is a 11-person project team comprised of University of Colorado Boulder aerospace-engineering students.

The project – a part of the student team’s senior-design course requirement  — has launched a crowdfunding effort to build a drone system that can fly near sperm whales and gather data using advanced sensors.

Sperm whales are listed as a vulnerable species and face deadly threats from mass-beaching events, ship collisions and sound pollution (since the whales use sonic waves to communicate). Several studies project a species-wide calamity within the next 30 years.

The student proposal describes the project’s scope:

“Ultimately the aircraft shall carry instrument payloads capable of locating sperm whales in the ocean. The winged aircraft launches from the helipad of a research vessel and returns and lands safely on the ship. The unmanned aircraft flies reconnaissance missions and provides a search viewpoint from a 1,000 feet altitude. That search capability is much more efficient than binoculars and submersed microphone technologies of limited range.”

Specifications include:

The team hopes to reach a funding target of $10,000 to purchase aircraft materials, fuselage, a drone propulsion system and military-grade audio-visual arrays.

Drones have increasingly become valuable in marine biology research:

 

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