From Prototype to Reality: Moving Beyond the Technology Hype in Ecological Research

Eline Lorer, Dries Landuyt
{"title":"From Prototype to Reality: Moving Beyond the Technology Hype in Ecological Research","authors":"Eline Lorer,&nbsp;Dries Landuyt","doi":"10.1002/bes2.2209","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>In the face of accelerating anthropogenic pressures threatening global ecosystems, the need for environmental monitoring grows ever more important. Continuous tracking of species and ecosystems helps us to understand ecosystem dynamics and functioning in these uncertain times. Scientists and conservationists everywhere are emphasizing that technological advancements can improve monitoring efforts by increasing spatial and temporal resolution and allowing for real-time data streams (Hahn et al. <span>2022</span>, Speaker et al. <span>2022</span>). The enhanced understanding of global ecosystem responses to, for instance, climate change is critical to inform policy decisions and guide conservation and environmental management (Allan et al. <span>2018</span>). More and more, the scientific and conservation community are creating new affordable monitoring systems fully tailored to their specific needs, mostly by leveraging open-source electronics such as the Arduino or Raspberry Pi platforms (e.g., Pearce <span>2012</span>, Jolles <span>2021</span>, Mühlbauer et al. <span>2023</span>). These success stories are published in various scientific journals, but when problems or failures occur they remain underexposed, potentially creating inflated expectations for readers (Lahoz-Monfort et al. <span>2019</span>). While reflective practice (see Box 1) is strongly embedded in social sciences research, it is rarely adopted in the natural sciences, let alone distributed via scientific publications (but see the Centre and Journal of Trial and Error; https://trialanderror.org/).</p><p>This piece of reflection grew from the complications we faced and insights we gained when developing an innovative phenology monitoring system ourselves. With this writing, we want to look beyond the technology hype and associated good news narratives to think about a future with sustainable technological innovations for ecological research and conservation. Sustainability, in this case, implies performance, stability, and reuse, which is definitely not the same as achieving successful measurements over 1 week, month, or year for one project. We firmly believe in the potential of technology to help us better understand the challenges our planet is faced with and we hope this testimony can serve as a motivation to take on ambitious innovation projects but with a realist view and a collaborative mindset.</p><p>Within our research project, we study how global environmental change affects flowering and vegetative phenology of forest understorey plant species. More specifically, we assess phenological shifts in a global change mesocosm experiment in which small plant communities are being exposed to warming, light addition, and nutrient addition. To investigate flowering phenology, we counted flowers every 2 days throughout the flowering season of 2021 and 2022 (Lorer et al. <span>2024</span>). Since the temperate forest understory harbors both early flowering and summer flowering species, this meant starting in February and ending in October. To monitor leaf phenology and intra-annual height dynamics of the plants, we measured plant height and cover for one whole year in 2023. Summed together, more than 900 person-hours (i.e., 120 full days) were spent for these field observations in only one location. Going into the field and observing the study species daily to weekly is indeed still the most conventional way to study plant phenology, but is time-consuming. This perfectly illustrates how important automated monitoring devices could be for phenology and plant growth studies. Different phenology camera approaches already exist, such as Phenocam (https://phenocam.nau.edu/webcam/) and Wingscapes Plantcam (Laskin et al. <span>2019</span>), but these are not customizable and come at high costs. And so, enthused by promising examples in the scientific literature, we started to work on a new cost-effective automated monitoring device.</p><p>We conceptualized a phenology sensor, equipped with multiple environmental sensors to monitor plant growth and the microclimate around the plants simultaneously. The device builds on the MIRRA (Microclimate Instrument for Real-Time Remote Applications) microclimate monitoring system (Pieters et al. <span>2021</span>) which we customized (both hard- and software) and expanded with a stereo-imaging component. MIRRA is a networked system of modular nodes, each supporting multiple sensors to measure several microclimate variables: soil and air temperature, relative humidity, and light intensity (Fig. 1). Nodes, custom-built printed-circuit boards (PCBs), periodically send their microclimate data to a gateway which uploads the data to a central cloud server, accessed by users through a web portal. The imaging component consists of two ESP32-CAMs, which are low-cost microcontrollers equipped with a 2 MP image sensor and a microSD card reader for local storage of the images (Fig. 1). The device is programmed to take pictures at sub-daily time steps and record microclimate data at the same time. Having two cameras suspended above the forest floor allows to characterize intra-annual plant height dynamics, that is, the phenology of vegetative growth, using close-range stereophotogrammetry techniques.</p><p>While we succeeded to work out an operational device that met many of our intended goals, we were not entirely satisfied with the end product. Moreover, we encountered many unforeseen obstacles along the development process, making it much more time-consuming than anticipated. This is indeed a common issue in the ecology and conservation community, yet often overlooked (Hahn et al. <span>2022</span>, Speaker et al. <span>2022</span>).</p><p>As ecologists without training or experience, but a great interest in technology and product design, we started conceptualizing our device by identifying the needs based on our plant ecological knowledge. Due to a lack of in-depth technical knowledge, we initially did not completely grasp the technical complexity of these needs. Really understanding your device's needs is often disregarded but is crucial because the choices made during the first conceptualization steps define the direction of the following design process (see Fig. 2). Furthermore, during this first step it is essential to ask yourself whether you are introducing a new device because of its novelty or because it will genuinely solve your problem. It is easy to be captivated by the idea of creating cutting-edge technology and forget about making these tools actually performant, stable, and user-friendly.</p><p>In the next step, we browsed for proof-of-concept projects in the scientific literature on ecological and meteorological monitoring devices. We found many but chose to adopt the MIRRA system mentioned above. We also consulted many online blogs and maker tutorials to learn about the involved hardware and software. These information sources helped the conceptualization of the envisaged device but we remained uninformed about the product design process that would have to follow. As a result, we did not formally translate our needs into specific features for the monitoring device; instead, this unfolded gradually throughout the process. This approach impeded us from verifying the feasibility and compatibility of every feature so were inevitably confronted with several issues which could have been anticipated with a formal feature list evaluation and optimization step.</p><p>Moving on, we quickly got stuck between the “Build prototype” and “Test” phases. While many projects we found in our literature search started deploying devices that were still in the prototype phase, data quality was very important for our application so this was impossible in our case. We kept revising our prototype within the confines of the existing design (e.g., in terms of chosen components) without exploring real alternatives to address certain limitations. Yet, sometimes a decent update entails a complete redesigning or rethinking of the problem. Sometimes you need to let go to go forward.</p><p>Finally, it cannot be stressed enough that a sufficiently long testing phase should be built into the project plan. Comprehensive testing means testing the device in various field conditions, over long periods of time to ensure long-term performance and stability. The length of the test phase and the chosen test strategy depends on the complexity of the developed tool and the required data quality, but scaling and deploying should never be rushed.</p><p>While we now understand that we are definitely not the only ones struggling, we believe that we would have adopted a more sensible approach from the onset if stories similar to ours would also have an outlet or if success stories would encompass the integral development process, including failed attempts. Most technological advances in ecology and conservation stem from uncoordinated inconsistent initiatives often leading to duplication of efforts and, in many cases, incomplete development processes (Joppa <span>2015</span>; Lahoz-Monfort et al. <span>2019</span>; Speaker et al. <span>2022</span>). Obviously, this “wastes time, money and resources in a discipline that can ill-afford to do so” (Joppa <span>2015</span>). So, where do we head from here?</p><p>First of all, not all technological innovations require complicated solutions. There are plenty of examples of well-functioning simple monitoring devices designed by ecologists or conservationists. On the other hand, producing advanced purpose-built technologies, like ours, requires a set of skills beyond the capabilities of one person so forming cross-disciplinary collaborations is crucial (Schulz et al. <span>2023</span>), something we only realized during our design process. We involved electrical engineers at our university on an ad hoc basis to help us with our further device development, but challenges persisted. We think that with an interdisciplinary collaboration from the outset, with a formal involvement of electrical and computer engineers, product design experts, and ecologists, we would now find ourselves with a more advanced product. In a true interdisciplinary collaboration (going beyond a multidisciplinary approach) ideas and perspectives are integrated across disciplines to solve one common research goal with new knowledge for all involved disciplines. The importance of interdisciplinarity for technological innovation in ecology and conservation has already been pointed out repeatedly over the last decade (Joppa <span>2015</span>; Allan et al. <span>2018</span>; Lahoz-Monfort et al. <span>2019</span>; Besson et al. <span>2022</span>; Hahn et al. <span>2022</span>; Schulz et al. <span>2023</span>). Involving engineers and computer science experts would call their attention to the urgent need for novel technologies to advance our understanding of ecosystems in the face of global change, prompting them to effectively and proactively use their expertise to protect biodiversity and ecosystem services. Yet, examples of true interdisciplinary collaborations remain rare.</p><p>For some applications, it can be of interest to include end-users in the development process. In short surveys, end-users can communicate their needs for measuring devices, concerning ease of use and deployment, desired accuracy, and battery life and capability under harsh conditions (Speaker et al. <span>2022</span>). Doing so can generate an impact beyond a single research question. For instance, connecting with potential users can facilitate the scaling up of the sensor network to cover larger geographic ranges, and studying a device's relevance for research or conservation purposes other than your own, may allow you to enhance its built-in versatility.</p><p>Achieving true interdisciplinary collaborations comes with many challenges, such as communication barriers and difficulties with the integration of perspectives. In order to stimulate such future collaborations, an interdisciplinary mindset and competence should be cultivated within our academic and educational system (as exemplified by the Centre for Unusual Collaborations; https://unusualcollaborations.ewuu.nl/). Cross-disciplinary collaborations can be translated to educational exercises where students in the biological sciences work together with engineering students to jointly solve an ecological research question by inventing novel technologies. During these group projects biology students are exposed to extensive computational thinking and technology design and manufacturing processes. Electrical engineering students learn about the ins and outs of ecological research and nature conservation and develop a raised awareness toward the impact of global changes on ecosystems. They can discover how to use their knowledge to contribute to these fields, bringing more societal relevance to their work. Moreover, designing new monitoring devices comes with many engineering challenges (Joppa <span>2015</span>). Devices need to be strong, light, power efficient, easy to deploy, multifunctional, but still cost efficient. In other words, a host of requirements come together posing an intriguing challenge to tomorrow's engineering students potentially elevating their interest in this domain.</p><p>Working on this project, we experienced first-hand the iterative nature of product design, which follows a spiral development process requiring multiple build, test, fail, and revise (and upgrade) iterations (see our interpretation of this process in Fig. 2). Failure is thus inherent to this process in order to improve the end product. However, our project funding (just like most short-term funding) was not matched to this kind of cyclical time investment, making it very hard to build sustainable products for long-term applications. Unsurprisingly, unsustainable financing is indicated as the principal constraint for technological innovation in this domain (Speaker et al. <span>2022</span>). And, the competition for scarce incompatible funding leads to overpromising in project proposals to secure financial support, often with disappointing outputs at the end of the grant period.</p><p>In conclusion, we believe that for a sustainable future of technological innovations for ecological research and conservation, we need to (1) dare to disseminate difficulties and failures, (2) transcend disciplinary boundaries and (3) provide dedicated research funding to support the iterative process of product design and facilitate interdisciplinary collaborations.</p>","PeriodicalId":93418,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","volume":"106 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/bes2.2209","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/bes2.2209","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In the face of accelerating anthropogenic pressures threatening global ecosystems, the need for environmental monitoring grows ever more important. Continuous tracking of species and ecosystems helps us to understand ecosystem dynamics and functioning in these uncertain times. Scientists and conservationists everywhere are emphasizing that technological advancements can improve monitoring efforts by increasing spatial and temporal resolution and allowing for real-time data streams (Hahn et al. 2022, Speaker et al. 2022). The enhanced understanding of global ecosystem responses to, for instance, climate change is critical to inform policy decisions and guide conservation and environmental management (Allan et al. 2018). More and more, the scientific and conservation community are creating new affordable monitoring systems fully tailored to their specific needs, mostly by leveraging open-source electronics such as the Arduino or Raspberry Pi platforms (e.g., Pearce 2012, Jolles 2021, Mühlbauer et al. 2023). These success stories are published in various scientific journals, but when problems or failures occur they remain underexposed, potentially creating inflated expectations for readers (Lahoz-Monfort et al. 2019). While reflective practice (see Box 1) is strongly embedded in social sciences research, it is rarely adopted in the natural sciences, let alone distributed via scientific publications (but see the Centre and Journal of Trial and Error; https://trialanderror.org/).

This piece of reflection grew from the complications we faced and insights we gained when developing an innovative phenology monitoring system ourselves. With this writing, we want to look beyond the technology hype and associated good news narratives to think about a future with sustainable technological innovations for ecological research and conservation. Sustainability, in this case, implies performance, stability, and reuse, which is definitely not the same as achieving successful measurements over 1 week, month, or year for one project. We firmly believe in the potential of technology to help us better understand the challenges our planet is faced with and we hope this testimony can serve as a motivation to take on ambitious innovation projects but with a realist view and a collaborative mindset.

Within our research project, we study how global environmental change affects flowering and vegetative phenology of forest understorey plant species. More specifically, we assess phenological shifts in a global change mesocosm experiment in which small plant communities are being exposed to warming, light addition, and nutrient addition. To investigate flowering phenology, we counted flowers every 2 days throughout the flowering season of 2021 and 2022 (Lorer et al. 2024). Since the temperate forest understory harbors both early flowering and summer flowering species, this meant starting in February and ending in October. To monitor leaf phenology and intra-annual height dynamics of the plants, we measured plant height and cover for one whole year in 2023. Summed together, more than 900 person-hours (i.e., 120 full days) were spent for these field observations in only one location. Going into the field and observing the study species daily to weekly is indeed still the most conventional way to study plant phenology, but is time-consuming. This perfectly illustrates how important automated monitoring devices could be for phenology and plant growth studies. Different phenology camera approaches already exist, such as Phenocam (https://phenocam.nau.edu/webcam/) and Wingscapes Plantcam (Laskin et al. 2019), but these are not customizable and come at high costs. And so, enthused by promising examples in the scientific literature, we started to work on a new cost-effective automated monitoring device.

We conceptualized a phenology sensor, equipped with multiple environmental sensors to monitor plant growth and the microclimate around the plants simultaneously. The device builds on the MIRRA (Microclimate Instrument for Real-Time Remote Applications) microclimate monitoring system (Pieters et al. 2021) which we customized (both hard- and software) and expanded with a stereo-imaging component. MIRRA is a networked system of modular nodes, each supporting multiple sensors to measure several microclimate variables: soil and air temperature, relative humidity, and light intensity (Fig. 1). Nodes, custom-built printed-circuit boards (PCBs), periodically send their microclimate data to a gateway which uploads the data to a central cloud server, accessed by users through a web portal. The imaging component consists of two ESP32-CAMs, which are low-cost microcontrollers equipped with a 2 MP image sensor and a microSD card reader for local storage of the images (Fig. 1). The device is programmed to take pictures at sub-daily time steps and record microclimate data at the same time. Having two cameras suspended above the forest floor allows to characterize intra-annual plant height dynamics, that is, the phenology of vegetative growth, using close-range stereophotogrammetry techniques.

While we succeeded to work out an operational device that met many of our intended goals, we were not entirely satisfied with the end product. Moreover, we encountered many unforeseen obstacles along the development process, making it much more time-consuming than anticipated. This is indeed a common issue in the ecology and conservation community, yet often overlooked (Hahn et al. 2022, Speaker et al. 2022).

As ecologists without training or experience, but a great interest in technology and product design, we started conceptualizing our device by identifying the needs based on our plant ecological knowledge. Due to a lack of in-depth technical knowledge, we initially did not completely grasp the technical complexity of these needs. Really understanding your device's needs is often disregarded but is crucial because the choices made during the first conceptualization steps define the direction of the following design process (see Fig. 2). Furthermore, during this first step it is essential to ask yourself whether you are introducing a new device because of its novelty or because it will genuinely solve your problem. It is easy to be captivated by the idea of creating cutting-edge technology and forget about making these tools actually performant, stable, and user-friendly.

In the next step, we browsed for proof-of-concept projects in the scientific literature on ecological and meteorological monitoring devices. We found many but chose to adopt the MIRRA system mentioned above. We also consulted many online blogs and maker tutorials to learn about the involved hardware and software. These information sources helped the conceptualization of the envisaged device but we remained uninformed about the product design process that would have to follow. As a result, we did not formally translate our needs into specific features for the monitoring device; instead, this unfolded gradually throughout the process. This approach impeded us from verifying the feasibility and compatibility of every feature so were inevitably confronted with several issues which could have been anticipated with a formal feature list evaluation and optimization step.

Moving on, we quickly got stuck between the “Build prototype” and “Test” phases. While many projects we found in our literature search started deploying devices that were still in the prototype phase, data quality was very important for our application so this was impossible in our case. We kept revising our prototype within the confines of the existing design (e.g., in terms of chosen components) without exploring real alternatives to address certain limitations. Yet, sometimes a decent update entails a complete redesigning or rethinking of the problem. Sometimes you need to let go to go forward.

Finally, it cannot be stressed enough that a sufficiently long testing phase should be built into the project plan. Comprehensive testing means testing the device in various field conditions, over long periods of time to ensure long-term performance and stability. The length of the test phase and the chosen test strategy depends on the complexity of the developed tool and the required data quality, but scaling and deploying should never be rushed.

While we now understand that we are definitely not the only ones struggling, we believe that we would have adopted a more sensible approach from the onset if stories similar to ours would also have an outlet or if success stories would encompass the integral development process, including failed attempts. Most technological advances in ecology and conservation stem from uncoordinated inconsistent initiatives often leading to duplication of efforts and, in many cases, incomplete development processes (Joppa 2015; Lahoz-Monfort et al. 2019; Speaker et al. 2022). Obviously, this “wastes time, money and resources in a discipline that can ill-afford to do so” (Joppa 2015). So, where do we head from here?

First of all, not all technological innovations require complicated solutions. There are plenty of examples of well-functioning simple monitoring devices designed by ecologists or conservationists. On the other hand, producing advanced purpose-built technologies, like ours, requires a set of skills beyond the capabilities of one person so forming cross-disciplinary collaborations is crucial (Schulz et al. 2023), something we only realized during our design process. We involved electrical engineers at our university on an ad hoc basis to help us with our further device development, but challenges persisted. We think that with an interdisciplinary collaboration from the outset, with a formal involvement of electrical and computer engineers, product design experts, and ecologists, we would now find ourselves with a more advanced product. In a true interdisciplinary collaboration (going beyond a multidisciplinary approach) ideas and perspectives are integrated across disciplines to solve one common research goal with new knowledge for all involved disciplines. The importance of interdisciplinarity for technological innovation in ecology and conservation has already been pointed out repeatedly over the last decade (Joppa 2015; Allan et al. 2018; Lahoz-Monfort et al. 2019; Besson et al. 2022; Hahn et al. 2022; Schulz et al. 2023). Involving engineers and computer science experts would call their attention to the urgent need for novel technologies to advance our understanding of ecosystems in the face of global change, prompting them to effectively and proactively use their expertise to protect biodiversity and ecosystem services. Yet, examples of true interdisciplinary collaborations remain rare.

For some applications, it can be of interest to include end-users in the development process. In short surveys, end-users can communicate their needs for measuring devices, concerning ease of use and deployment, desired accuracy, and battery life and capability under harsh conditions (Speaker et al. 2022). Doing so can generate an impact beyond a single research question. For instance, connecting with potential users can facilitate the scaling up of the sensor network to cover larger geographic ranges, and studying a device's relevance for research or conservation purposes other than your own, may allow you to enhance its built-in versatility.

Achieving true interdisciplinary collaborations comes with many challenges, such as communication barriers and difficulties with the integration of perspectives. In order to stimulate such future collaborations, an interdisciplinary mindset and competence should be cultivated within our academic and educational system (as exemplified by the Centre for Unusual Collaborations; https://unusualcollaborations.ewuu.nl/). Cross-disciplinary collaborations can be translated to educational exercises where students in the biological sciences work together with engineering students to jointly solve an ecological research question by inventing novel technologies. During these group projects biology students are exposed to extensive computational thinking and technology design and manufacturing processes. Electrical engineering students learn about the ins and outs of ecological research and nature conservation and develop a raised awareness toward the impact of global changes on ecosystems. They can discover how to use their knowledge to contribute to these fields, bringing more societal relevance to their work. Moreover, designing new monitoring devices comes with many engineering challenges (Joppa 2015). Devices need to be strong, light, power efficient, easy to deploy, multifunctional, but still cost efficient. In other words, a host of requirements come together posing an intriguing challenge to tomorrow's engineering students potentially elevating their interest in this domain.

Working on this project, we experienced first-hand the iterative nature of product design, which follows a spiral development process requiring multiple build, test, fail, and revise (and upgrade) iterations (see our interpretation of this process in Fig. 2). Failure is thus inherent to this process in order to improve the end product. However, our project funding (just like most short-term funding) was not matched to this kind of cyclical time investment, making it very hard to build sustainable products for long-term applications. Unsurprisingly, unsustainable financing is indicated as the principal constraint for technological innovation in this domain (Speaker et al. 2022). And, the competition for scarce incompatible funding leads to overpromising in project proposals to secure financial support, often with disappointing outputs at the end of the grant period.

In conclusion, we believe that for a sustainable future of technological innovations for ecological research and conservation, we need to (1) dare to disseminate difficulties and failures, (2) transcend disciplinary boundaries and (3) provide dedicated research funding to support the iterative process of product design and facilitate interdisciplinary collaborations.

Abstract Image

从原型到现实:超越生态研究中的技术炒作
面对威胁全球生态系统的不断加剧的人为压力,对环境监测的需求变得越来越重要。对物种和生态系统的持续跟踪有助于我们了解这些不确定时期的生态系统动态和功能。世界各地的科学家和环保主义者都强调,技术进步可以通过提高空间和时间分辨率以及允许实时数据流来改善监测工作(Hahn et al. 2022, Speaker et al. 2022)。加强对全球生态系统对气候变化等的响应的了解,对于为政策决策提供信息并指导保护和环境管理至关重要(Allan et al. 2018)。越来越多的科学和保护社区正在创建新的负担得起的监测系统,完全根据他们的特定需求量身定制,主要是通过利用开源电子产品,如Arduino或Raspberry Pi平台(例如,Pearce 2012, Jolles 2021, m<s:1> hlbauer等人2023)。这些成功的故事发表在各种科学期刊上,但当问题或失败发生时,它们仍然没有被充分曝光,可能会给读者带来过高的期望(Lahoz-Monfort et al. 2019)。虽然反思性实践(见框1)在社会科学研究中根深蒂固,但很少在自然科学中采用,更不用说通过科学出版物传播了(但见试验与错误中心和杂志;https://trialanderror.org/).This我们在开发一个创新的物候监测系统时,遇到了一些复杂的问题,也获得了一些深刻的见解。通过这篇文章,我们希望超越技术炒作和相关的好消息叙事,思考生态研究和保护的可持续技术创新的未来。在这种情况下,可持续性意味着性能、稳定性和重用,这与为一个项目在一周、一个月或一年的时间内实现成功的度量是完全不同的。我们坚信,技术有潜力帮助我们更好地了解我们的星球所面临的挑战,我们希望这一证词能成为一种动力,让我们以现实的观点和合作的心态,承担雄心勃勃的创新项目。在我们的研究项目中,我们研究了全球环境变化如何影响森林林下植物物种的开花和营养物候。更具体地说,我们评估了全球变化中生态实验中的物候变化,其中小型植物群落暴露于变暖,光照和营养添加。为了研究开花物候,我们在2021年和2022年的开花季节每2天统计一次花数(Lorer et al. 2024)。由于温带森林林下既有早花物种,也有夏花物种,这意味着从2月开始,到10月结束。为了监测植物的叶片物候和年内高度动态,我们在2023年测量了一整年的植物高度和覆盖度。仅在一个地点进行这些实地观察总共就花费了900多人小时(即120个整天)。每天或每周到野外观察研究物种确实仍然是研究植物物候学的最传统的方法,但费时。这完美地说明了自动化监测设备对物候学和植物生长研究的重要性。不同的物候相机方法已经存在,例如Phenocam (https://phenocam.nau.edu/webcam/)和wingscape Plantcam (Laskin et al. 2019),但这些方法无法定制,而且成本很高。因此,在科学文献中有前途的例子的鼓舞下,我们开始研究一种新的具有成本效益的自动监测设备。我们构思了一个物候传感器,配备多个环境传感器,同时监测植物生长和植物周围的小气候。该设备建立在MIRRA(实时远程应用微气候仪器)微气候监测系统(Pieters等人,2021)的基础上,我们定制了(硬件和软件)并扩展了立体成像组件。MIRRA是一个模块化节点的网络系统,每个节点支持多个传感器来测量几个小气候变量:土壤和空气温度、相对湿度和光强度(图1)。节点是定制的印刷电路板(pcb),定期将其小气候数据发送到网关,网关将数据上传到中央云服务器,用户可以通过门户网站访问这些数据。成像组件由两个ESP32-CAMs组成,这是一个低成本的微控制器,配有一个200万像素的图像传感器和一个microSD卡读卡器,用于本地存储图像(图1)。该设备被编程为以次每日的时间步骤拍摄照片,同时记录微气候数据。 将两台摄像机悬挂在森林地面上方,可以使用近距离立体摄影测量技术来描述一年四季植物高度动态,即营养生长的物候学。虽然我们成功地设计出了一个操作设备,满足了我们的许多预期目标,但我们对最终产品并不完全满意。此外,我们在开发过程中遇到了许多不可预见的障碍,这使得它比预期的要耗时得多。这确实是生态和保护界的一个普遍问题,但经常被忽视(Hahn et al. 2022, Speaker et al. 2022)。作为没有受过培训或经验的生态学家,我们对技术和产品设计非常感兴趣,我们开始根据我们的植物生态知识确定需求,从而开始概念化我们的设备。由于缺乏深入的技术知识,我们最初并没有完全掌握这些需求的技术复杂性。真正理解你的设备的需求经常被忽视,但这是至关重要的,因为在第一个概念化步骤中做出的选择定义了接下来的设计过程的方向(见图2)。此外,在第一个步骤中,你必须问自己,你引入一个新设备是因为它的新颖性还是因为它能真正解决你的问题。人们很容易被创造尖端技术的想法所吸引,而忘记了如何使这些工具真正具有高性能、稳定性和用户友好性。下一步,我们在生态和气象监测设备的科学文献中浏览概念验证项目。我们发现了很多,但选择采用上述的MIRRA系统。我们还咨询了许多在线博客和制造商教程,以了解所涉及的硬件和软件。这些信息来源有助于设想设备的概念化,但我们仍然不了解必须遵循的产品设计过程。因此,我们没有正式地将我们的需求转化为监控设备的具体功能;相反,这在整个过程中逐渐展开。这种方法阻碍了我们验证每个功能的可行性和兼容性,因此我们不可避免地遇到了一些问题,这些问题本可以通过正式的功能列表评估和优化步骤来预测。接着,我们很快就陷入了“构建原型”和“测试”阶段之间。虽然我们在文献检索中发现许多项目开始部署仍处于原型阶段的设备,但数据质量对我们的应用程序非常重要,因此在我们的案例中这是不可能的。我们一直在现有设计的范围内修改我们的原型(例如,根据所选择的组件),而没有探索真正的替代方案来解决某些限制。然而,有时候一个像样的更新需要对问题进行彻底的重新设计或重新思考。有时候你需要放手才能继续前进。最后,应该在项目计划中构建一个足够长的测试阶段,这一点再怎么强调也不为过。综合测试是指在各种现场条件下进行长时间的测试,以确保设备的长期性能和稳定性。测试阶段的长度和所选择的测试策略取决于所开发工具的复杂性和所需的数据质量,但是扩展和部署永远不应该匆忙进行。虽然我们现在明白,我们肯定不是唯一在挣扎的人,但我们相信,如果与我们类似的故事也有出口,或者如果成功的故事包含完整的开发过程,包括失败的尝试,我们将从一开始就采取更明智的方法。生态和保护方面的大多数技术进步源于不协调、不一致的举措,往往导致工作重复,在许多情况下导致开发过程不完整(Joppa 2015;Lahoz-Monfort et al. 2019;Speaker et al. 2022)。显然,这“浪费了时间,金钱和资源在一个学科,不能负担得起这样做”(Joppa 2015)。那么,我们该往哪走呢?首先,并非所有的技术创新都需要复杂的解决方案。有很多由生态学家或自然资源保护主义者设计的功能良好的简单监测设备的例子。另一方面,生产像我们这样的先进的专用技术,需要一套超出一个人能力的技能,因此形成跨学科合作至关重要(Schulz et al. 2023),这是我们在设计过程中才意识到的。我们邀请了我们大学的电气工程师来帮助我们进一步开发设备,但挑战依然存在。我们认为,从一开始就有跨学科的合作,有电气和计算机工程师、产品设计专家和生态学家的正式参与,我们现在会发现自己拥有更先进的产品。 在真正的跨学科合作中(超越多学科方法),跨学科的思想和观点被整合在一起,以解决所有相关学科的共同研究目标和新知识。在过去的十年中,跨学科对生态和保护技术创新的重要性已经被反复指出(Joppa 2015;Allan et al. 2018;Lahoz-Monfort et al. 2019;Besson et al. 2022;Hahn et al. 2022;Schulz et al. 2023)。工程师和计算机科学专家的参与将唤起他们对新技术的迫切需求,以促进我们在面对全球变化时对生态系统的理解,促使他们有效和积极地利用他们的专业知识来保护生物多样性和生态系统服务。然而,真正的跨学科合作的例子仍然很少。对于某些应用程序,在开发过程中包括最终用户可能会很有趣。在简短的调查中,最终用户可以传达他们对测量设备的需求,包括易用性和部署,所需的准确性以及恶劣条件下的电池寿命和能力(Speaker et al. 2022)。这样做可以产生超越单一研究问题的影响。例如,与潜在用户的联系可以促进传感器网络的扩展,以覆盖更大的地理范围,研究设备与研究或保护目的的相关性,而不是你自己的目的,可以让你增强其内置的多功能性。实现真正的跨学科合作伴随着许多挑战,例如沟通障碍和观点整合的困难。为了促进这种未来的合作,我们的学术和教育系统应该培养跨学科的思维和能力(如特殊合作中心;https://unusualcollaborations.ewuu.nl/)。跨学科合作可以转化为教育练习,生物科学专业的学生与工程专业的学生一起工作,通过发明新技术共同解决生态研究问题。在这些小组项目中,学生将接触到广泛的计算思维和技术设计与制造过程。电气工程专业的学生将学习生态研究和自然保护的来龙去脉,并提高对全球变化对生态系统影响的认识。他们可以发现如何利用他们的知识为这些领域做出贡献,为他们的工作带来更多的社会相关性。此外,设计新的监测设备还面临许多工程挑战(Joppa 2015)。设备需要坚固、轻便、节能、易于部署、多功能,但仍然具有成本效益。换句话说,大量的需求聚集在一起,对未来的工程专业学生提出了一个有趣的挑战,可能会提高他们对这一领域的兴趣。在这个项目中,我们亲身体验了产品设计的迭代本质,它遵循一个螺旋式的开发过程,需要多次构建、测试、失败和修改(和升级)迭代(参见图2中我们对这个过程的解释)。因此,为了改进最终产品,失败是这个过程固有的。然而,我们的项目资金(就像大多数短期资金一样)与这种周期性的时间投资不匹配,这使得为长期应用程序构建可持续的产品非常困难。不出所料,不可持续的融资被认为是该领域技术创新的主要制约因素(Speaker et al. 2022)。而且,对稀少的不相容资金的竞争导致在项目建议中过度承诺以获得财政支助,往往在赠款期结束时产出令人失望。总之,我们认为,为了生态研究和保护技术创新的可持续未来,我们需要(1)敢于传播困难和失败,(2)超越学科界限,(3)提供专门的研究资金,以支持产品设计的迭代过程,促进跨学科合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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