HOBO Data Loggers Aid Sea Turtle Preservation in Malaysia
On Tioman Island, the Juara Turtle Project uses HOBO data loggers to link egg incubation temperature with size and fitness of sea turtle hatchlings.
Read more
Water Level Loggers Help Save Sea Turtle Nests
Florida State University researchers use HOBO water level data loggers to identify sea turtle nesting areas at high risk of groundwater inundation.
Read more
Restoring Coral Reefs at the Island of Koh Tao
The New Heaven Reef Conservation Program (NHRCP) uses HOBO Pendant data loggers as part of its work to actively restore the coral reefs around the island of Koh Tao.
Read more
Three Generations near the Banks of the Bagmati
HOBO MX2001 Bluetooth Water Level loggers monitor Nepal's Bagmati River and serve as proof-of-concept for citizen-science methods being employed in an effort to improve the area's dwindling water supply.
Read more
Onset Temperature Loggers Deployed to Aid River Restoration in Pacific Northwest
A conservation organization is using TidbiT data loggers to help protect and restore rivers in the Pacific Northwest.
Read more
Water Level Monitoring Provides Concrete Data for Long-term Wetland Study
A Minnesota environmental consulting company is monitoring six wetlands to assess any hydrology-related impacts from a nearby residential development under construction.
Read more
Monitoring Supports Coastal Environmental Impact Study in South Korea
South Korean water management agency utilizes data loggers to investigate coastal water impacts from hydroelectric dam discharges.
Read more
Water Level Loggers Assess Salt Marsh Response to Sea Level Rise
An estuarine research reserve uses water level data loggers to prove that losses of a certain marsh grass accelerate during periods of extremely high water levels.
Read more
Water Level Loggers Provide Insight into Mine Water Discharge
Hydrogeologists are using water level data loggers that can withstand highly-corrosive conditions to investigate mines in the Pittsburgh coal basin.
Read more
An interview with Tim Noyes, Research Specialist at Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences
A Coral Reef Ecology & Optics Lab researcher discusses his use of data loggers to understand seawater temperature trends around Bermuda's coral reef platform.