Archive for the ‘MakerBot Projects’ Category

How You Can Participate in Project Shellter!

How You Can Participate in Project Shellter Photo credit

Project Shellter welcomes various levels of participation based upon interest and skill. Here are six ways from casual to dedicated in which you can participate:
  1. Interested but don’t have a lot of time?
    Participate on a casual basis by observing the time-lapse videos of the crabitats and logging any crab encounters in the comments. Who knows, you might be among the first to see a crab “try on” a printed shell! New crabitat videos are available every day at youtube.com/​ProjectShellter.
  2. Have 3D modeling skills? You can review Dr. Bulinski’s interview to get guidelines on what makes a great shell and then upload yours to Thingiverse.com so it can be printed and tested in a crabitat. You can see what others have created at bitly.com/ProjectShellterShells. Remember to tag your shell with shellter so everyone can find it!
  3. Interested in programming or advanced mathematics? Sweet! Help convert these shell formulae from the commercial Maple software to the open source Sage, Blender, or Shapesmith software to allow more people to design, explore and print sea shells. Hermit crabs the world over will chirp your praises!
  4. Are you a hermit crab caretaker? Fantastic! You can help test the shells. Just introduce yourself on the MakerBot Operators Group and let the community know you can help test shells. MakerBot Operators are friendly, helpful and located around the world.
  5. Got a 3D printer? Great! Print out any shells at bitly.com/ProjectShellterShells, and then post to the MakerBot Operators Group to let the community know you have shells to test.
  6. Have a 3D printer and hermit crabs? Awesome! You’re a self-contained Project Shellter machine! Please print out the shells at bitly.com/ProjectShellterShells, introduce them to your crabs, and share your observations and experiences at projectshellter.com or @ProjectShellter!
However you choose to participate, your contribtions are encouraged and welcomed!
Follow, share and contribute to help save hermit crabs by keeping natural shells in the wild! Use the hashtag #shellter or the shellter tag to let others know you are participating in this crowd-sourced science experiment!:

This guest post is part of Project Shellter.

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Project Shellter at TEDxYouth@Flanders

TEDxYouth Flanders

 

Thingiverse citizen deeeep is organizing a workshop around Project Shellter at TEDxYouth in Flanders, Belgium on November 20:

We are organizing a workshop for kids from 11 to 18 year old during the TEDxYouth@Flanders event in Belgium.
The idea is that the kids will sketch out their ideas for the shells and then some of them will get picked and made in CAD and printed. I will try to post the sketches and CAD files on thingiverse once they are done, so everybody can enjoy them and the kids can see their models online and see people liking them and printing them.

Thanks for the interest and support deeep!

We can’t wait to see what shells the kids create! Upload them to Thingiverse and we’ll print them out put them in the @ShellterEast and @ShellterWest crabitats!

If you’re in Flanders on November 20, go check out the event!

Follow, share and contribute to help save hermit crabs by keeping natural shells in the wild! Use the hashtag #shellter:

This guest post is part of Project Shellter.

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Dr. Bulinski on First Crab Encounters

Project Shellter Non-Crab Encounter 01Project Shellter Crab Encounter 01

Dr. Bulinski took some time out of her busy day to weigh in on the first crab encounters.

After looking at the footage, I don’t think I would classify the first video with Kourtney as a true examination.  It looked like she just walked over it.  In my experience, when the crabs investigate a shell, they really take the time to move it around in its appendages, insert claws inside and rotate the shell around.  The second video (Khloe) looks more like an investigation–I think I would go so far as to say that it would be “Examination-inserted appendages into shell.

I appreciate these professional observations, and will update the earlier post to reflect Dr. Bulinski assessment. She continued:

One thing I noticed though was that the printed shell was WAY too large for the crabs.  If the printed shells were much smaller I think that you might have better luck with the crabs investigating and interacting with them.

I also felt the shell was too large, so I am printing 60% and 50% sized shells. They will soon be in ShellterWest, awaiting another crab encounter!

Thanks for the input Dr. Bulinski!

This guest post is part of Project Shellter.

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Bre talks about Project Shellter for Txchnologist

YouTube Preview Image

Txchnologist, the online magazine from GE, has posted the first clip from an interview with Bre they did at our workshop. What better subject to start with than Project Shellter?

Watch the the video to hear Bre talk about the mission behind Project Shellter and why the MakerBot community is taking on the challenge. They also got some great shots of the crabitat at Shellter East and a shell being printed on the Thing-O-Matic!

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Crab Encounters of the First Kind!

We have an encounter!

Mashing up J. Allen Hynek’s famous UFO encounter taxonomy, with Dr. Bulinski’s shell assesment guidelines, we have Crab Encounters!

  • Crab Encounter of the First Kind: Examination
  • Crab Encounter of the Second Kind: Switching
  • Crab Encounter of the Third Kind: Adoption

 

Last night an encounter of the first kind happened! Kourtney Karshellian examined a 70% sized ABS Prototype Shell 01 (Wednesday November 02, 2011 at 03:15:00 AM PDT) and here’s the video evidence:

Not to be outdone, Kourtney’s sister Khloe, spent even more time examining the shell later in the morning (Wednesday November 02, 2011 at 11:09:00 AM PDT):

So in one 8 hour period two encounters of the first kind happened! Prototype Shell 01 is being recognized as a shell!

Who can design a shell that will result in an encounter of the second kind? Upload your designs to Thingiverse, tag them with shellter and we’ll print them on a Thing-O-Matic and find out!

One more thing, install the video feed bookmarklets and watch the ShellterEast and ShellterWest crabitats live. Maybe you’ll be the first to see the next crab encounter!

This guest post is part of Project Shellter.

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Project Shellter Crabitat Video Feeds!

The cameras are now deployed at each crabitat!

Big ups to Dropcam for being the first sponsor of Project Shellter!

Here are screen captures of recent activity in each crabitat:

Tori Shelling taking a late night stroll at ShellterEast

             Tori Shelling (on right) taking a late night stroll at ShellterEast

The Karshellians enjoying a midnight snack at ShellterWest

             The Karshellians (Khloe and Kim, left and right) enjoying a midnight snack at ShellterWest

 

Here’s the real news: now you can see a live crabitat video feed while you’re surfing the interwebs; just drag-and-drop the following images to your bookmarks toolbar or right click each and add to your favorites.

ShellterEast Camera                                                      ShellterWest Camera

This will install a bookmarklet that will allow you to watch the crabs from anywhere on the interwebs (except a blank page)!

Once installed, click on the words in the toolbar to launch a live video feed in a popup window.

Project Shellter Video Bookmarklet - ShellterEast

Depending upon your browser and version, you may have to allow popups for certain sites to see the feed.

These are alpha versions of the bookmarklets. If you have any problems using them please post your experience in the comments.

Also, if you’re a web developer that wants to help with the continued development of these bookmarklets, drop a note in the comments.

Hermit crabs are, for the most part, nocturnal creatures. Most crabitat activity occurs during nighttime PDT and EDT. YMMV.

This guest post is part of Project Shellter.

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Listen to Bre talk about Project Shellter on PRI!

PRI talked to Bre about Project Shellter for the latest episode of their Living on Earth radio show. Listen here to get the scoop on what Project Shellter’s mission is, why hermit crabs are facing a housing crisis, and the challenges that come with the project (who knew hermit crabs were right handed?!).

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Everyone’s Talking About Project Shellter!

Project Shellter has been getting a lot of love from the media this week. At this rate, Paris Shellton and Tori Shelling (the stars of the Brooklyn crabitat) will be international superstars in no time!

Check out some of the coverage that’s run so far:

Engadget

TechCrunch

Sierra Club

Wired UK

Popular Science

Geek.com

Gizmag

DVICE

Discover Magazine

Crisp Green

GeekOSystem

Care2 Causes

Shareable

MAKE Magazine

Bre also did an interview for the PRI Radio show, Living on Earth. Tune in here starting this Saturday to listen to the Project Shellter segment!

 

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Introducing Dr. Bulinski: Hermit Crab Researcher (Part 2)

This guest post is the second part of a two part interview with Project Shellter research advisor, Dr. Katherine V. Bulinski. Part one is available here.

Naked Coenobita clypeatus hermit crab without shell
Photo credit

Miles Lightwood (ML): Another idea you shared was an alternate approach to addressing the shortage with printed shells. Please explain.

Dr. Katherine Bulinski (KB): One approach that was initially considered is that these printed shells could be distributed in the natural habitat if a hermit crab shortage had been identified.  We discussed the use of biodegradable plastics for such an application so that the environmental impact should be less than if you used a non-biodegradable plastic.  I think it is very important to be wary of manipulating a natural ecosystem by introducing man-made (or in this case, machine made) products as we may not recognize all of the possible effects of our actions.

Another more immediately practical approach would be to encourage people that have hermit crabs to use the printed shells instead of the natural shells available at pet stores. Part of the reason for the shell shortage in some parts of the world is over-collecting of shells in different regions.  In the natural environment, empty snail shells would either be used by a hermit crab,  be broken apart naturally to become carbonate sand, slowly dissolve into ocean water, become buried or become a surface for small organisms to grow on.  When possible we should try to leave natural ecosystems as untouched by people as possible, so printing shells for commercial use so that natural shells can remain a part of the ecosystem would be a positive goal for this project.

ML: Is there any advice or insight on hermit crabs or their shells you can provide for Project Shellter contributors?

KB: Hermit crabs evolved over time to use the shells of certain species of gastropod as homes. Most snail shells curve to the right and hermit crabs evolved to have an abdomen that curves to the right to make effective use of the shape of the snail shell. In my paper I cite research that shows crabs select shells based upon several criteria:

  • Opening (aperture) size - the opening must be the correct size for the crab to use its larger left claw as kind of protective barrier
  • Opening (aperture) shape - some crabs prefer round openings, while others may prefer oval openings
  • Shell length and width - the shell must be the correct size to allow the crab to fully retract when threatened
  • Shell weight/thickness - the crab expends energy to haul around the shell and therefore it must not be too heavy. The shell must be sturdy enough to withstand being carried around and to withstand possible attacks from predators, so it must not be too light either.
  • Shell damage - in the natural world, many of the shells that are used by hermit crabs are not pristine.  Many have holes and chips along the aperture but are still used because shells are so limited in certain ecosystems.  Hermit crabs prefer shells that are undamaged as crabs in damaged shells are more easily evicted by other hermit crabs and these crabs are also more vulnerable to predators.

 

When printing shells for this project it may be necessary to experiment with any or all of these properties to create a shell that a hermit crab will call home. Additionally, the interior surface of a natural shell is smooth, so the lines I see on 3D prints might need to be sanded or otherwise smoothed.

ML: Do you have any last thoughts to share with Project Shellter contributors?

KB: Hermit crabs play an important scavenging role in both marine and terrestrial ecosystems and I hope this project helps to conserve the snail shells that are found in their natural habitat. I wish all contributors success and am looking forward to watching the project unfold!

ML: One more thing: do you think a printed shell will have the sound of the ocean in it like a real one?

KB: (Laughs) I don’t know, but there’s only one way to find out!

Thank you Dr. Bulinski for acting as research advisor! I look forward to sharing the crowd-sourced science of Project Shellter with you.

 

Project Shellter is social! Follow, share and contribute to help save hermit crabs by keeping natural shells in the wild!

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Introducing Dr. Bulinski: Hermit Crab Researcher (Part 1)

This guest post is part one of a two part interview with Project Shellter research advisor, Dr. Katherine V. Bulinski.

Dr. Katherine V. Bulinski
Photo credit

I’ve asked Dr. Katherine V. Bulinski to serve as research advisor on Project Shellter. This interview was conducted via phone and email before and after Dr. Bulinski journeyed to Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands as part of her work as a Professor of Geoscience at Bellarmine University.

Miles Lightwood (ML): I was introduced to your work while researching Project Shellter. Would you please describe your involvement with hermit crabs?

Dr. Katherine Bulinski (KB): Sure. I’ve always been fascinated with hermit crabs and had them as pets when I was a kid, and actually still do! As part of my graduate studies I was fortunate enough to work with hermit crabs in a scientific context as a side project greatly differing from my main research area which broadly speaking, is an investigation of the paleoecology and diversity of fossil marine invertebrates.

The hermit crab project began as a part of a field course on predator prey interactions at Friday Harbor Laboratory on Puget Sound in Washington state.  I designed a study that tested hermit crab shell selection behavior when subjected to a variety of different experimental conditions including the presence of competition by other hermit crabs and the threat of an active predator.  The study revealed that the hermit crabs in the study were least likely to switch shells when exposed to other hermit crabs, which may be an indication that competition for shells is actually a greater danger to the crabs than predators.  This study was published with the title “Shell-Selection Behavior of the Hermit Crab Pagurus granosimanus in Relation to Isolation, Competition, and Predation” in the Journal of Shellfish Research (2007).  I hope some of my knowledge about hermit crab behavior can be beneficial to the project.

ML: In layperson’s terms, please describe what a hermit crab is and its place within the ecosystem.

KB: Sure. A hermit crab is a type of crustacean (the group that contains lobsters, shrimp and crabs among other organisms)  and hermit crabs have a fossil record extending back to the Cretaceous (when dinosaurs were still roaming the earth).  Hermit crabs are different from most other crustaceans in that their abdomen is not covered with an exoskeleton.  For this reason, the crab needs to cover their vulnerable soft body part with a protective covering, which in most cases is the shell left behind by a deceased snail.  As the hermit crabs grow, they need to find larger and larger shells.  When adequately sized shells are unavailable, the desperate crabs either occupy shells that are much too small for them, or may occupy whatever they can find: broken beer bottles, shotgun shells, plastic pipe. It’s sad to see.

One of the reasons why I love hermit crabs is that contrary to their name, hermit crabs are very social creatures. In the wild, they can live in groups of hundreds or even thousands (I saw a huge colony while traveling in Panama a few years ago), climbing atop one another while scavenging for food and are frequently investigating shells (whether they are empty or occupied by a snail or fellow hermit crab) as they search for a better “home”. Living in a colony ensures a wide selection of differently sized shells will be available – essential for growing crabs.

ML: We discussed some of the experiment design for the project, and you suggested several interesting strategies.

KB: Yes, well-designed experiments are critical for good science. We recently discussed the layout of the crab habitat, or the “crabitat” and established that if we wish to encourage shell switching behaviors, it should not be setup as it might be for pet hermit crabs.  While it is important to provide lots of moist sand, water and food,  there should not be any other objects in the crabitat (like sticks to crawl on).  The removal of these items would increase the likelihood that the crabs would investigate the printed shells. Once experimentation is over, the various huts and branches that make for excellent additions to a pet hermit crab terrarium can be introduced to the crabitat.

We also discussed that the various models of the printed shells should also be identified in some way. Since the plastic comes in different colors, coloration is an easy way to distinguish one shell design from another. Numbering them is another.

The interest in the use of printed shells can be assessed in a few ways:

  • Examination – Before a crab switches shells, it first investigates the new shell by rolling it around and inserting various appendages into the opening of the shell. If this behavior occurs, it validates that the crab recognizes the printed shell as a type of potential “home” whether or not the crab chooses to occupy it.  When crabs engage in these kinds of behaviors, they are ensuring that the shells are in fact empty, and the dimensions of the shell are appropriate for the crab.  Hermit crabs will often engage in this behavior, sometimes investigating the same shell multiple times before switching shells or moving on to another behavior.  It is not known whether the crabs will be deterred by a shell made out of a material other than the natural calcium carbonate that makes up natural snail shells.
  • Switching – If the shell passes examination, the crab may try on the shell, and this happens very rapidly so as to minimize the risk from predators or from other hermit crabs. Sometimes after switching shells, for whatever reason,  the crab has cold feet (or cold chelipeds in this case) and switches back to the original shell. This kind of behavior frequently occurs with natural shells so it may occur with the printed ones.
  • Adoption – When a crab adopts a printed shell and resides within it after switching to begin a new kind of behavior (e.g., eating, resting, digging in the sand)  it is likely that the hermit crab prefers the new shell over the old shell.  If this adoption happens multiple times among the different crabs residing in the experimental crabitats,  it is likely that the printed shells could be useful to the pet hermit crab trade

 

Part two of the interview will be available tomorrow!

Project Shellter is social! Follow, share and contribute to help save hermit crabs by keeping natural shells in the wild!

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