Sensor-Based Behavioral Monitoring and Health Surveillance at the Domestic-Wildlife Interface: Integrating Technology and Ecology for Animal Welfare Assessment CALL 2026/2027

The interface between human activities, domestic animal management, and wildlife populations is critical for disease transmission, conservation, and ecosystem health. Balancing these components reduces zoonotic and livestock disease risks, minimizes wildlife stressors, and improves conservation outcomes. Camera trap networks, telemetry, and biologging technologies quantify wildlife behavior, habitat use, and contact rates between wildlife, livestock, and humans, identifying transmission hotspots and spillover risks. Biomarker analysis reveals physiological impacts of anthropogenic pressures on wildlife and domestic animals. Understanding spatial ecology and social structure uncovers transmission pathways and super-spreader individuals. Evidence-based monitoring detects imbalances such as high wildlife densities near livestock, habitat encroachment, or inadequate biosecurity. This enables targeted solutions including spatial zoning, feeding restrictions, optimized grazing strategies, and public education and sensitization. Continuous assessment allows adaptive management. For veterinary services, this integrated framework supports early infection detection, spillover risk evaluation, vaccination optimization, and sustainable practices that protect animal health, support conservation, and maintain human activities in shared landscapes.

 

Five publications related to the Researc topic for the candidate interview:

 

Tutor: Prof. Giorgio Marchesini
e-mail address: giorgio.marchesini@unipd.it