Title: P1252122134kPUsF
1Wireless Sensor Networks for Habitat
Monitoring BY Alan Mainwaring
and David Culler Intel Research, Berkeley Intel
Corporation Joseph Polastre, Robert Szewczyk and
David Culler EECS Department University of
California at Berkeley John Anderson College of
the Atlantic Bar Harbor, Maine
                      Wireless biological
sensors placed in nests
A student uses the 'petrel peeper', a portable
infrared video system, to inspect a burrow.
Students at Maine's College of the Atlantic are
using the data to learn more about Storm Petrels
in their native habitat.
2OUTLINE
- Requirements for Habitat Monitoring are
Established - Design Requirements for Hardware, Sensor Network
and Capabilities for Remote Data Access and
Management are Determined - A System Architecture is Proposed to Address
these Requirements - A Specific Instance of the Architecture is
Presented for Monitoring Seabird Nesting
Environments and Behavior - Results and Recommendations are Discussed
3Habitat Monitoring Questions
- What is the usage pattern of nesting burrows over
24-72 hour cycle when one or both members of a
breeding pair may alternate incubation duties
with feeding at sea? - What changes can be observed in the burrow and
surface environmental parameters during the
course of the approximately 7 month breeding
season(April-October)? - What are the differences in the
micro-environments with and without large numbers
of nesting petrals?
4Habitat Monitoring Requirements
- Minimal disturbance in monitoring
- Simple, Easy deployment
- Economical Method for Conducting Long Term
Studies
FOR EXAMPLE ...
510.
- Existing Land-Atmosphere Observation Systems
- Requires local power utilities
- Requires miles of power cables
- Expensive(100k)
- Takes weeks to deploy
- Requires flat locations
- Measurements are limited to tower footprints
6Remote Sensing Requirements
- Internet Access
- Hierarchical Network (wireless capability)
- Sensor Network Longevity (9-12 months)
- Operating off-the-grid (bundled energy supplies)
- Management at-a-distance (PDA Query a Sensor,
Adjust Param, Locate Devices) - Inconspicuous operation
- System Behavior
- In-situ Interactions
- Sensors and Sampling
- Data Archiving
7Proposed System Architecture
8Implementation Strategy
9Sensor Network Node
10Sensor Board
11Energy Budget
Panel Size in2 Total Watt Hours per Day x
____1_____ Peak Winter Hours
.065W / in2
12Expected Lifetime
13GREAT IDEAEXCEPT THE SIZE OF THE MICE WAS TOO
LARGE TO FIT IN PETREL BURROWS!
14(No Transcript)
15Patch Gateway
FIRST CHOICE CerfCube Strong Arm embedded
System Running Linux and 802.11b single hop w/
CompactFlash 802.11b adapter 1GB Storage and
Solar Panel 2.4GHz antenna w/Range of 1000
feet HOWEVER 802.11b requires bidirectional
link in MAC and has TCP/IP Overhead And had 2
required 2 orders of magnitude more power than a
mote
16Base Station Installation (DBMS) User Interfaces
including a PDA
17RESULTS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
18OTHER APPLICATION SERVICES
LOCALIZATION, TIME SYNCRONIZATION AND SELF
CONFIGURATION
19DATA SAMPLING AND COLLECTION
20 Communications
- Power Efficient Communication Paradigms
must include routing algorithms, medium access
algorithms and managed hardware access tailored
for efficient network communication while
maintaining connectivity when required to source
or relay packets. Future above ground nodes will
have harvesting capabilities to enable node hop
routing
21 Health Status Monitoring
Diagnostics such as voltage at periodic rates as
opposed to only during transmission (or
Intelligent Schemes)
22LATER ADVANCES
23NEW WEATHER BOARD DESIGN
- Mica SensorboardThe mica sensorboard can have
these sensors - temperature
- photo
- magnetomer
- accelerometer
- microphone
- sounder (buzzer)
24MICA 2
25CALIBRATION
26NEW PACKAGING