By Sam Schipani, smithsonian.com 5/16/17
JOSHUA TREE, CA — Tim Shields
holds a baby desert tortoise shell up to the sun, peering through it like a
kaleidoscope. He’s carrying a container filled with these empty carapaces,
perforated with coin-sized holes and picked clean of life.
Over the four decades Shields has
been a wildlife biologist with the Bureau of Land Management and U.S.
Geological Survey, he has watched the tortoise population in the Mojave Desert
steeply decline. Where once he saw dozens of baby tortoises over the span of a
season, now he can go days without spotting a single one. What he does find are
these empty shells—sometimes dozens in a single nest, scattered around like
discarded pistachio shells.
We’re standing in a picnic area
in Joshua Tree Park, and Shields is showing me these hollowed-out shells
to illustrate the damage. It’s easy to see how an animal could peck right
through this thin casing: “It’s about as thick as a fingernail,”
Shields points out. Desert tortoise shells don’t harden into a tank-like
defense until the reptile is about 5 or 6 years old. Until then, hatchlings are
walking gummy snacks for one of the most intelligent, adaptive and hungry
desert predators: ravens.
Even before ravens, the tortoise
was in trouble—and its fate has long been tied up with the history of humans.
As people moved into the Mojave, the tortoise was faced with challenges its
evolution could not have foreseen: off-road vehicle use, the
illegal pet trade and pandemic-level respiratory disease. By 1984,
biologists estimated a 90
percent population decline in desert tortoise population over the last
century, thanks largely to habitat destruction. Today, an estimated 100,000
tortoises remain in the American Southwest.
According to Kristin Berry, a
research scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey's Western Ecological
Research Center who has been monitoring desert tortoises since the 1970s,
these reptiles are an umbrella species. In other words, they require such
specific conditions to survive that they are one of the best indicators of the
health of the Mojave Desert ecosystem.
“It’s the proverbial canary in
the mine,” adds Ron
Berger, chairman and CEO of the nonprofit Desert Tortoise Conservancy and
president of the nonprofit Desert Tortoise Preserve Committee. “If we can’t
help this animal that can go without food or drink for years, then what are we
doing to this planet?”
Humans are also culpable in
aiding and abetting the tortoise’s primary threat, those pesky ravens. Over the
past half century, these predatory birds have been proliferating as new sources
of once-limited food and water resources become available in the form of
human-made landfills, road kill, dumpsters, sewage ponds and golf courses. In
direct contrast to the falling tortoise numbers, estimates place the raven
population as
increasing by 700 percent since 1960.
Shields remembers a pivotal
moment in 2011, when he could not spot a single juvenile tortoise roaming out
in the field. Instead, the only one he saw was struggling in the beak of a
raven. “That moment hit me really hard,” he says. He decided that the current
conservation model—monitoring
tortoises, restoring their habitats and relocating them to preserves—wasn’t
working. Something more innovative needed to be done.
Desert tortoises have roamed the
Southwest for millions of years, adapting as the shallow inland sea transformed
into the dry landscape it is today. These reptiles are crucial to their desert
ecosystems. While creating their burrows, they till soil nutrients for plant
life and inadvertently create hiding spots for lizards and ground squirrels.
Gila monsters and coyotes eat their eggs for breakfast; roadrunners and snakes
snack on juvenile tortoises; badgers and golden eagles feast on adults.
They're also a bit of a celebrity
around these parts. Ironically, the same pet trade that contributed to their decline
may have also contributed to the species’ iconic status: Shields wagers that
the generation of Southern Californians who grew up with sweet pet tortoises
have developed a nostalgic fondness for the species. As the California
state reptile, they’ve cemented their position as poster-children for
conservation in the desert.
In 2014, Shields founded the
investor-funded company Hardshell Labs
to develop a series of high-tech
defense methods for protecting this beloved reptile. He hopes to use these
techniques to enact a process called active ecological intervention, creating
safe zones for baby tortoises throughout the desert where they can reach
maturity at 15 to 20 years old and breed until, someday, the populations reach
a sustainable level.
One of those methods is
scattering 3D printed baby tortoises decoys, which emit irritants
derived from grape juice concentrate (farmers use this chemical compound to
keep birds from congregating on agricultural fields and commercial centers).
Another is laser guns—TALI
TR3 Counter-Piracy lasers, to be precise. These forearm-sized guns,
mounted with aiming scopes that were originally used as a form of non-lethal
defense for ships in the western Indian Ocean, fire a 532 nanometer green
light, to which ravens’ eyes are especially sensitive.
Ravens have such sharp vision
that even in the daylight, the 3-watt beam looks as solid as a pole waving in
their faces. The lasers can be mounted on a rover known the Guardian Angel
rover, or shot by skilled humans. Shields will aim for the ravens’ heads to get
closer to their sensitive eyes if they are being persistent, but shooting
within a meter’s range is usually enough to spook them.
“We once cleared a pistachio
field [of ravens] in three days,” Shields says of his technological
arsenal.
Perhaps the most crucial part of
these technologies is that they are non-lethal. Ravens are federally protected:
Though they’re native to the desert, the birds, their nests and their eggs all
fall under the Migratory
Bird Treaty Act. And while organizations like the Coalition for a Balanced Environment argue that
the boom of raven populations warrants their removal from the list in order to
enhance raven management practices, many recognize their importance to the
ecosystem.
Shields is among them. Even if he
finds shooting near the birds with the lasers “intensely satisfying,” he
doesn’t want to risk angering those who love and appreciate these birds by
supporting more deadly technologies. “We’re not going to get rid of the charm
of ravens, and there are people who are as charmed as ravens as I am by
tortoises,” he admits. “We better acknowledge that if we’re going to find a
solution.”
Instead, his technologies work
with the raven’s intelligence in mind, frustrating the birds but not hurting
them. Ravens are incredibly adaptive, so no single line of defense alone will
work. Biologists will stake out in the desert scrub and shoot the lasers to
keep the ravens on their toes. It is a skill that takes training —and time—to
develop.
Now, Hardshell Labs is hoping to
turn that challenge into a benefit. They’re aiming to roboticize their
technologies and turn them into a sort of video game. The team hopes to tap
into flow
theory, the obsessiveness on solving the problem that makes gaming so
addictive, in order to draw players into the game of protecting the desert
tortoise.
“Environmentalism does not sell,”
explains Michael Austin, Co-Founder of Hardshell Labs and Shields’s childhood
friend. “What plays for people is fun and joy.”
It’s especially hard to get
people to care about conservation way out in the deserts. When compared to lush
biomes like rainforests, the desert has long persisted in the popular
imagination as remote, barren and inhabitable, Austin says. Historically,
“desert” is synonymous with “wasteland.” “The coral reefs have better PR,” he
laughs.
In actuality, the desert is a
place teeming with life.
Because of its elevation and unique geology, the Mojave Desert especially is a unique eco-region,
with 80 to 90 percent endemic plants and species found nowhere else in the
world. It is also one of the most imperiled areas of the West, with over
100 of its over 2,500 species considered threatened.
Shields’ ultimate vision for
Hardshell Labs is to turn armchair
activists into real-time conservationists, by allowing users to remotely
control techno-tortoises, lasers, and rovers online. They have already
tested an early version of the game with Raven
Repel, an augmented reality app in the vein of Pokémon Go. One day, he
says, players from around the world will work in teams, using different tools
to engage in ecological management like predation reduction, behavioral
observation, fostering the spread of native plants, and preventing invasive
species.
Several bird species, including
the endangered
sage grouse, also suffer from the ever-increasing hordes of ravens preying
on their eggs. The same principles used for the decoy tortoises could be used
to 3D print realistic eggs equipped with repellant, Shields says. Beyond
ravens, other invasive species—the Indo-Pacific lionfish in the Caribbean,
pythons in the Everglades, the Asiatic carp in the Great Lakes—could be
captured by submarines controlled remotely by players. Players could even
monitor video feeds over the elephant and rhinoceros habitats to spot illegal
poachers.
The irony of defending nature
digitally does not escape Shields. “Tortoises are so wired in to their
immediate environment,” he muses. “In contrast, our species is catastrophically
alienated on every level from our life support system.”
But he also recognizes the
potential. A 14-year-old kid in a wheelchair could be a valued tortoise
biologist, he says; a prisoner could reconnect with the world through positive
contribution to the cause. In Shields’s view, denying that we are a screen
culture now is delusional, so conservationists might as well make the most of
it and use modern-day tools like crowdsourcing and virtual reality to leverage
positive change.
“My long, long term goal is to
get people to fall in love with the planet through the screen, and then realize
the limitations of the screen, and then get out themselves and do it,” he says.
“This is my game, and I am having so bloody much fun.”
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