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Ocean tracking technologies: observing species at risk
Apostle, R.; Gazit, T. (2016). Ocean tracking technologies: observing species at risk. Marit. Stud. 15(1): [1-17]. https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40152-016-0052-2
In: Maritime Studies. Springer: Amsterdam. ISSN 2212-9790; e-ISSN 2212-9790, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Endangered species
    Measurement > Telemetry > Acoustic telemetry
Author keywords
    Animal tracking technology; Actor-network-theory

Authors  Top 
  • Apostle, R.
  • Gazit, T.

Abstract
    The Ocean Tracking Network is a major global project to establish tracking of endangered fish and marine mammal species through acoustic telemetry. The project has only begun to generate the policy-related outcomes that may be utilized as benchmarks for evaluating the success of the project. We propose that projects like this one make technical advances before scientific ones, and that scientific advances may be quite long term. Further, the development of policy outcomes is shaped by the larger political economies in which the technologies are located; scientists are quite used to “flying under the radar”, waiting for more propitious circumstances. There are serious questions regarding which actors are capable of making matters of fact issues of public debate.

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