Our Projects

Bengal Tigers

Through using Bioacoustics to study alarm calls made by various prey animals alerting at tigers, we aim to develop a warning system for the local people to help mitigate human-wildlife conflict.

Cao Vit Gibbons

The cao vit gibbon is one of the rarest mammals in the world, living in one tiny patch of inaccessible jungle in northern Vietnam. We use the sound of their haunting song to monitor the population, track their movement, and understand the social interactions between different gibbon groups.

Wolves

Wolves are intelligent, highly social, and use their iconic howls to communicate over long distances. Our wolf projects, across the USA and Europe, use those howls to triangulate the local of the animals and to measure both the movement and interactions between of the wolves, and also to investigate the possible meanings of different kinds of howls.

Dolphins

Dolphins use complex whistles and clicks to communicate, but after decades of research, the meanings of these sounds remains unclear. We are working both with wild dolphins in the Red Sea, and training captive animals to understand: how to the dolphins themselves perceive the different sounds that they make?