[Esip-envirosensing] Bear deterrence methods for sensor stations

Scotty Strachan scotty at dayhike.net
Mon Mar 28 14:47:58 EDT 2016


Brian, I'll chip in on the power side as well.

Like Renee says, sometimes you have to size the PV array and battery 
bank for the marginal condition. I have a site in a forest that runs sap 
flow sensors, a met station, radios, cameras, etc. The clearing is not 
large, and my solar panels always have some shade on them somewhere, 
especially in winter. The solution was to run nine 250w panels into two 
separate charging/battery arrays w/~300Ah+ each and mount the panels at 
60deg for snowshed. I only get a couple hours of charging time per day, 
but it's enough to bring the batteries back up fast.

Here's the other thing - you don't want non-science systems (like 
fences, etc) to run down the same batteries that you use for your 
loggers and data collection. When I have dual-redundant PV/battery 
systems, I then run a passive power combiner to a main 12v bus and then 
use fused Low Voltage Disconnects for each subsystem, each set at 
different cutoff voltages depending on priority. At no time do I allow a 
system (even dataloggers) to pull down a battery bank lower than 25%, 
otherwise you just kill your batteries during a long outage and still 
have no data.

For instance, your could place your feed to your fence energizer (or 
it's separate battery trickle charger) with a conservative LVD setting 
(like 11.5v), and your data collection on 11v or lower.

Make sure you have really good grounds on your fence circuit.

Example of LVD product I use: 
http://www.rogue-engr.com/12-Volt-30-Amp-Low-Voltage-Disconnect_p_15.html

Example of passive combiner I use when I go with parallel 
PV-charger-battery arrays (this way I can lose a battery, charger, or 
panel and still have a functioning system, well as run a non-critical 
device separately from one of the battery banks and still not compromise 
the science system): 
http://www.newmarpower.com/Automatic_Power_Selectors/Automatic_Power_Selectors.html

If you are into electronics, you can get creative with this sort of 
thing. The trick is to use devices which are not adding liability to the 
hardware dependency list....

Cheers,
Scotty


Scotty Strachan
Coordinator, Environmental Research
Department of Geography
University of Nevada
web: scottystrachan.com
email: scotty at dayhike.net
cell: 775-721-1308

On 3/28/2016 10:39 AM, "Renée F. Brown" via Esip-envirosensing wrote:
> I agree- electric fences are the best way to keep wildlife out. Not 
> sure of your power design, but sounds like you do have some sort of 
> solar panel and battery system. You may need to consider beefing up 
> both your solar panel system as well as your battery bank such that 
> the batteries alone can get you through cloudy and/or snowy days, 
> while the panels are large enough to recharge the battery bank when 
> enough sun is available.
>
> Renee
>
>> Renée F. Brown
> Sevilleta LTER & Sevilleta Field Station
> Department of Biology
> University of New Mexico
>
>
>> On Mar 28, 2016, at 11:11 AM, Wyngaard, Jane R (398M-Affiliate) via 
>> Esip-envirosensing <esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org 
>> <mailto:esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org>> wrote:
>>
>> I worked on some weather stations that had to be protected from 
>> baboons - we also had to use electric fences in the end.
>>
>> I wasn’t on the power supply design but is it literally a matter of 
>> too little sunshine or would perhaps a more sophisticated recharge 
>> system help?
>>
>> Jane
>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>> Jane Wyngaard, Ph.D
>> Postdoctoral scholar
>> Instrument software and science data systems Section (398)
>>
>> University of Southern California
>> NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
>> 4800 Oak Grove Drive MS: 158-256D
>> Pasadena, CA 91109
>>
>> Phone:  818/354-6237
>> Email:Jane.R.Wyngaard at jpl.nasa.gov <mailto:Jane.R.Wyngaard at jpl.nasa.gov>
>> http://sunset.usc.edu/~jwyngaar/ <http://sunset.usc.edu/%7Ejwyngaar/>
>>
>>
>>
>> From:Esip-envirosensing <esip-envirosensing-bounces at lists.esipfed.org 
>> <mailto:esip-envirosensing-bounces at lists.esipfed.org>> on behalf of 
>> Brian Herndon via Esip-envirosensing 
>> <esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org 
>> <mailto:esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org>>
>> Reply-To:Brian Herndon <bherndon at uga.edu <mailto:bherndon at uga.edu>>
>> Date:Monday, 28 March 2016 07:50
>> To:"esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org 
>> <mailto:esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org>" 
>> <esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org 
>> <mailto:esip-envirosensing at lists.esipfed.org>>
>> Subject:[Esip-envirosensing] Bear deterrence methods for sensor stations
>>
>>     Greetings all,
>>     The Coweeta LTER has environmental sensor stations located
>>     throughout the southern Appalachians and as our sensor network
>>     has expanded to 68 stations, the incidents of black bear damage
>>     have increased.  These stations are located in fairly remote
>>     hardwood forests requiring equipment to be hiked in. Many are
>>     setup like the image below with soil moisture and temperature
>>     probes radiating from the base. We bury the sensor cables so most
>>     of the issues have been with the enclosure and solar panel. We
>>     have tried installing electric fences around the enclosure, but
>>     maintaining battery power has been an issue.  I would like to
>>     receive any suggestions, hear some war stories, etc. as to how
>>     any of you have been able to prevent wildlife damage (especially
>>     bears) to sensor stations.
>>     Brian Herndon
>>     Information Manager
>>     Coweeta LTER <x-msg://6/coweeta.uga.edu>
>>     706.542.5691
>>     <image003.jpg>
>>
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>
>
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