Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

SERGE WICH

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

|

April 2024

Serge Wich’s favorite days at work are spent out in the forest, studying orangutans in Sumatra and Borneo or chimpanzees in Tanzania.

- Kathryn Hulick

SERGE WICH

When he’s not out in the field, he teaches primate biology and does research at Liverpool John Moores University in England.

Wich has pioneered the use of new technology in conservation. In 2011, he and his colleague Lian Pin Koh of the National University of Singapore (NUS) in Asia built and tested one of the first drones used to study wildlife. One year later, the pair founded ConservationDrones.org. This organization helps wildlife researchers around the world use drone technology.

In 2019, Wich started another technology project, called Conservation AI. This time, he partnered with some of his colleagues at Liverpool John Moores University: computer scientists Carl Chalmers and Paul Fergus and astrophysicist Steven Longmore. Conservation AI is an online platform offering machine learning models that tag images from drones and camera traps. The platform has processed 18 million images, and counting.

Wich’s main area of interest, though, has always been primates and the tropical forests where they live. He is an editor of the book Orangutans: Geographic Variation in Behavioral Ecology and Conservation.

WHAT GOT YOU STARTED STUDYING ORANGUTANS?

I started during my master’s studies at the University of Utrecht [in the Netherlands] in 1993, focusing on a site in Sumatra with some really amazing lowland forest and beautiful large fig trees. The university had a research site there, and I applied for a chance to go. I was lucky enough to be selected.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

ANIMAL FIREFIGHTER TO THE RESCUE

Can animals help manage the risks of deadly wildfires?

time to read

3 mins

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

FIRE DANGER

WHY THE RISK OF WILDFIRES KEEPS GROWING

time to read

4 mins

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

The Miller NEW Normal

WHAT TODAY’S WILDFIRES TELL US ABOUT OUR FUTURE

time to read

8 mins

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

WOMEN AND FIREFIGHTING: A GOOD FIT

Jessica Gardetto is a firefighter. Her father was, too. “I grew up with my dad coming home smelling like wildfire and covered in soot,” she says.

time to read

1 min

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

What is happening on your fingertips when they get all wrinkly in a hot tub?

—Felix G., age 10, Montana

time to read

1 mins

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

WHEN the SMOKE CLEARS

THE LINGERING EFFECTS OF THE RECENT PACIFIC PALISADES AND ALTADENA EATON FIRES

time to read

6 mins

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

PICKING TEAMS

Keep it fair with a strategy that relies on geometry.

time to read

2 mins

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

SHAN CAMMACK

WILDLIFE BIOLOGIST AND FIRE SAFETY OFFICER

time to read

3 mins

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Scientists Create Mice With Woolly Mammoth-Like Fur

RESEARCHERS AT A COMPANY IN TEXAS ARE WORKING TO CREATE A LIVING ANIMAL THAT RESEMBLES THE EXTINCT WOOLLY MAMMOTH. Recently, they produced mice with traits of the large mammal. The mice all have coats with mammoth-like fur, and some of the small mammals also have genes that help them store fat. Both features would help the animals survive in the cold Arctic, where the woolly mammoth once lived.

time to read

1 min

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Cool Sunshade Added to the Nancy Roman Space Telescope

THE NANCY ROMAN SPACE TELESCOPE IS A NEW TELESCOPE THAT NASA IS BUILDING AND WILL LAUNCH INTO SPACE, LIKELY IN EARLY 2027.

time to read

1 min

Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size