Specialists of the project to restore the population of the Central Asian leopard in North Ossetia began to apply new methods of animal monitoring. The new technique was applied in connection with the need to search for the female Agura.
In March, the GPS information from her collar stopped working, and before that the collar of the male Baksan stopped sending signals. Satellite transmitters could be damaged while hunting wild ungulates, or they could have had technical problems. But on both collars, radio beacons continue to work, the signals from which scientists have recorded from time to time during ground monitoring. Therefore, it was decided to search for animals using a radio signal from the air.
For this, special equipment was selected to amplify the signal, and with the help of a light aircraft, flights were carried out over the territory of North Ossetia. On the plane, on both sides of the board, special antennas were fixed, which makes it possible to pick up the signal both to the left of the flight route, and to the right, as well as in front. This arrangement of equipment increases the likelihood of detecting animals.
11
August
2021