About ICARUSTechnical ChallengeTechnical SolutionScience & ProjectsParticipantsPublicationsPhotos

International Cooperation for
Animal Research Using Space
ICARUS' mission is working towards establishing a remote sensing platform for scientists world-wide that can track small organisms globally, enabling observations and experiments over large spatial scales.

ICARUS is currently (Oct 2008):
1. Publishing a White Paper

projects//Recent Updates
Oct 2008//White Paper online

ICARUS publishes its
White Paper
.

May 23-26, 2007//Movebank workshop at Princeton
ICARUS collaborates with www.movebank.org on a NSF-funded tracking technology meeting.
.
Apr 17, 2007//ESA meeting
ICARUS representative Martin Wikelski participates in 'System of Systems' initiative workshop at the European Space Agency.
.
Jan 1, 2007// 'Going wild'
The 'Journal of Experimental Biology' publishes a commentary on the importance of ICARUS.
 
Aug 11, 2006//Science mag
The Science magazine has a special issue on "Migration and Dispersal" - 'On the move'.
ICARUS is featured under "Tag team"
 
Aug 2, 2006//Goddard Visit
Princeton engineering students present the HERMES satellite project at NASA Goddard.

July 26, 2006//New Site
Launch of the new 'ICARUS' website. The old website http://www.princeton.edu/
%7Etracking/ICARUS_website/
index.html
will be abandoned soon.

photos//Newest Information (Oct 08)
papers//Recent Publications

Holland et al. 2007. Where the wild things go. Biologist 54, 214-219

Thorup et al. 2007. Evidence for a navigational map stretching across the continental U.S. in a migratory songbird. PNAS 104, 18115-18119.

Frank Mycroft and Steven Savin: "Designing the communication link" (Thesis). May 2007

The Economist. Satellite tracking. No hiding place. 2007, March 8th. Print edition.

Wikelski M, Kays RW, Kasdin J, Thorup K, Smith JA, Cochran WW, Swenson GW Jr. 2007. Going wild – what a global small-animal tracking system could do for experimental biologists. J Exp Bio 210, 181-186.

Holland RA, Thorup K, Vonhof MJ, Cochran WW, Wikelski M. Bat orientation using Earth’s magnetic field. Nature 445, 702.

Holland RA, Wikelski M, Wilcove DS. 2006. How and why do Insects migrate? Science 313, 794-796.

Cochran WW and Wikelski M. 2005. Individual migratory tactics of New World Catharus thrushes: Current knowledge and future tracking options from space. In: Birds of Two Worlds: Ecology and Evolution of Migration (Ed. by R. Greenberg and P. Marra), pp. 274-289. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Bowlin MS, Cochran WW and Wikelski M. 2005. Biotelemetry of New World thrushes during migration: Physiology, energetics and orientation in the wild. Integrative and Comparative Biology 45, 295-304.

Erik Kroeker © 2007

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