2019
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210x.13231
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OpenDropOff: An open‐source, low‐cost drop‐off unit for animal‐borne devices

Abstract: The use of animal‐borne devices in wildlife studies is increasing due to the miniaturization of sensors and reductions in component costs. Retrieval of animal‐borne devices is often advantageous for several reasons, including data retrieval and animal welfare considerations; however, commercially available drop‐off units are often prohibitively expensive and/or unreliable. Here, we present ‘OpenDropOff’, an open‐source, low‐cost electronic drop‐off unit for remotely detaching animal‐borne sensors from individu… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Open‐source technologies are increasingly being used by wildlife biologists, and our active RFID system adds to the growing body of devices freely available (e.g. OpenDrop; Rafiq et al., 2019). WildWID provides a low‐cost, adaptable alternative to commercially available RFID systems, and their successful deployment across a range of species highlights their applicability to a range of systems and questions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Open‐source technologies are increasingly being used by wildlife biologists, and our active RFID system adds to the growing body of devices freely available (e.g. OpenDrop; Rafiq et al., 2019). WildWID provides a low‐cost, adaptable alternative to commercially available RFID systems, and their successful deployment across a range of species highlights their applicability to a range of systems and questions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This time window may be problematic for species and situations for which it is hard to predict when a particular animal can be found at a specific time and location. However, many currently available devices do not provide this flexibility but are rather programmed to be released at a given time (Matthews et al 2013, Rafiq et al 2019). In its current form, the locking mechanism can run in Active mode for almost four hours (i.e.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, equipping smaller animals requires the consideration of additional constraints, such as size and weight restrictions, while current devices designed for larger animals often rely on bulky, heavy and non‐reusable squib (explosive) release mechanisms (Chapman and Hamerly 1988, Marshall et al 2005). There is therefore a clear need for a cheap and open‐access solution (Rafiq et al 2019).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are two options for dropoff type attachments: (a) attachments that are programmed to detach at a specific time and date (e.g. Cypher et al 2014;Rafiq et al 2019;Klauder et al 2021), and (b) attachments that passively detach due to natural degradation of materials (e.g. Opiang 2009;O'Mara et al 2014;Evens et al 2018;Rayner et al 2021;Ross et al 2022).…”
Section: Wider Implications In Small Vertebrate Telemetrymentioning
confidence: 99%