mSAIL: Milligram-Scale Multi-Modal Sensor Platform for Monarch Butterfly Migration Tracking

Author:

Lee Inhee1,Hsiao Roger2,Carichner Gordy2,Hsu Chin-Wei2,Yang Mingyu2,Shoouri Sara2,Ernst Katherine2,Carichner Tess2,Li Yuyang1,Lim Jaechan2,Julick Cole R.3,Moon Eunseong2,Sun Yi2,Phillips Jamie4,Montooth Kristi L.3,Green Delbert A.2,Kim Hun-Seok2,Blaauw David2

Affiliation:

1. University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

2. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

3. University of Nebraska---Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, USA

4. University of Delaware, Newark, DE, USA

Abstract

Each fall, millions of monarch butterflies across the northern US and Canada migrate up to 4,000km to overwinter in specific mountain peaks in central Mexico. To track monarchs precisely and study their navigation, a monarch tracker must obtain daily localization of the butterfly as it progresses on its three-month journey. And, the tracker must perform this task while having a weight in the tens of milligrams (mg) and measuring a few millimeters (mm) in size to avoid interfering with the monarch's flight. This paper proposes mSAIL, 8 × 8 × 2.6mm and 62mg embedded system for monarch migration tracking, constructed using 8 prior custom-designed ICs providing solar energy harvesting, an ultra-low power processor, light/temperature sensors, power management, and a wireless transceiver, all integrated and 3D stacked on a micro PCB with an 8 × 8mm printed antenna. The proposed system is designed to record and compress light and temperature data during the migration path while harvesting solar energy for energy autonomy, and wirelessly transmit the data at the overwintering site in Mexico, from which the daily location of the butterfly can be estimated using a deep learning-based localization algorithm. A two-day trial experiment of mSAIL attached to a live butterfly in an outdoor botanical garden demonstrates the feasibility of individual butterfly localization and tracking.

Funder

National Geographic Society Education Foundation

MCubed, University of Michigan

Monarch Butterfly Fund Flight Challenge

NSF

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Reference24 articles.

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