How to Do Real Animal Sciences Research at Home: A High School Student’s Guide to Free Tools, Affordable Kits, and Public Databases
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Animal sciences used to mean a university field station, a vivarium, and a faculty advisor signing off on your protocol. That is no longer the only path. A high schooler with a smartphone, a few invertebrate cultures, and a laptop can now run studies that would have been a graduate thesis 15 years ago.
This guide is your starting point. It walks through the three things you need to do real animal sciences research from your bedroom or backyard: the home kit, the free software, and the public datasets that count as primary data.
Why this is possible now
Three shifts changed what a high schooler can study.
First, animal data went public. iNaturalist, eBird, GBIF, Movebank, Macaulay Library, Xeno-canto, and NCBI host billions of observations, recordings, GPS tracks, and gene sequences. Anyone can download them. A careful re-analysis of public data is a real research contribution.
Second, smartphones became scientific instruments. Modern phone cameras shoot 240 frames per second, focus to within a few millimeters, and feed video straight into computer-vision pipelines. Combined with a clip-on macro lens or a $30 USB microscope, your phone now measures heart rates, swim speeds, pose angles, and color changes that used to need lab cameras.
Third, professional analysis software became free. DeepLabCut tracks animal pose. BirdNET identifies bird species from audio. Fiji handles biological image analysis. AlphaFold predicts protein structures. Google Colab gives you a free GPU. You no longer pay to use the same tools researchers publish with.
Put together, a kitchen counter, a backyard, and a laptop now cover behavior, physiology, development, genetics, ecology, and evolution.
The animal sciences home kit
You will not need everything here. Pick the items that match the kind of question you want to ask.
Live model organisms (cheap and ethical for high schoolers)
- Tenebrio molitor (mealworms), crickets, and isopods (pillbugs): a few dollars at a pet or bait store, easy to keep in plastic bins.
- Drosophila melanogaster (fruit flies): wild-type and mutant stocks (white, sepia, vermilion) run roughly $30 from biology supply companies.
- Caenorhabditis elegans starter kits: around $30, ships with plates and food bacteria.
- Planaria, brine shrimp (Artemia), Daphnia magna, snails, and pond cultures: $10 to $25 each.
- Honeybees, ants, moths, and backyard birds: observed in place, no purchase needed.
Imaging and recording
- Smartphone with slow-motion video and a tripod or clamp.
- Clip-on macro lens ($10 to $20) for insect and Daphnia close-ups.
- USB digital microscope, 50x to 1000x ($25 to $60) for cell-level and planarian work.
- USB lavalier or shotgun microphone for bird, cricket, and bat-call recording.
Sensors and microcontrollers
- Arduino Uno or Nano kit ($25 to $40).
- MH-Z19 CO2 sensor for respiration ($25), DHT22 for temperature and humidity ($5).
- Raspberry Pi 4 or Zero 2 W ($15 to $55) for audio loggers, time-lapse, and BirdNET nodes.
- Motion-triggered trail camera ($30 to $80) for backyard mammals and chickens.
- Piezo speaker or small ultrasonic transducer for predator-cue playback.
Behavior arenas and chambers
- Plastic Petri dishes, glass jars, clear takeout containers, white printer paper.
- LED bulbs at different color temperatures (2700K, 4000K, 6500K) for light-response studies.
- Aquarium air pump and bubbler ($10) for controlling dissolved oxygen.
- Cheap kitchen thermometer, hygrometer, and digital scale (0.01 g resolution, around $15).
Consumables
- Food-grade reagents you probably own: salt, sugar, baking soda, vinegar, vitamin C, green tea, turmeric, caffeine, capsaicin, spirulina powder, yogurt cultures.
- Pipettes or oral medicine syringes (1 mL and 10 mL) from a pharmacy.
A full home setup typically lands between $80 and $250. Computational-only projects cost nothing beyond a laptop.
The signature technique: smartphone video plus DeepLabCut
The one technique that unlocks the most animal-sciences projects is markerless pose tracking from a phone video. It turns any animal you can film into quantitative data.
Here is the 5-step workflow.
- Build a clean arena. A white sheet of paper, a small Petri dish, or a glass-walled chamber against a contrasting background. Light it evenly with a desk lamp. Mount your phone on a tripod directly above.
- Film a calibration object. Place a ruler or a coin in the frame for one second. Every later measurement in pixels can then be converted to real distance.
- Record your trials. Use the same frame rate, lighting, and camera angle for every animal. Code each video with a blinded ID so you do not bias later scoring.
- Train a tracker. Upload videos to Google Colab. Use DeepLabCut to label 20 to 50 frames with the body parts you care about (head, tail, legs, antennae). The free GPU trains your model in under an hour.
- Extract features and test a hypothesis. Compute speeds, turning angles, time-in-zone, or pose asymmetry per animal. Run a proper statistical test (mixed-effects models in R or Python's statsmodels).
The same pipeline works for mealworm boldness trials, Daphnia swimming under microplastic stress, planarian locomotion, cricket jump biomechanics, honeybee waggle dances, and shelter-dog tail-wag asymmetry. Master it once, reuse it everywhere.
The dry-lab side: free software you can install today
Group your toolkit by what you want to do with your data.
Behavior and tracking
- DeepLabCut: markerless pose estimation for any animal from video.
- BORIS: free, event-by-event behavior coding for ethograms.
- Fiji / ImageJ: image analysis, particle counting, morphometrics, and time-lapse measurement.
- OpenCV (Python): pupil dilation, color tracking, motion detection, and frame-by-frame measurement.
Audio and bioacoustics
- Audacity: waveform editing, spectrograms, noise reduction.
- Raven Lite: spectrogram analysis built for animal vocalizations.
- BirdNET-Analyzer: identifies bird species from audio clips and runs on a Raspberry Pi.
Bioinformatics and genomics
- BioPython: parse FASTA, GenBank, and PDB files; run BLAST queries from a script.
- MEGA or IQ-TREE: build phylogenetic trees from aligned sequences.
- PAML: detect positive selection (dN/dS) across species.
- PyMOL or ChimeraX: visualize protein structures from AlphaFold or the PDB.
- AutoDock Vina: free molecular docking on your laptop.
Machine learning and modeling
- scikit-learn: classifiers and regressors for tabular data.
- PyTorch and TensorFlow: CNNs for image classification, transformers for sequence data.
- ESM-2 and AlphaFold: protein language and structure models, free on Colab.
- SLiM or simuPOP: population-genetics and conservation simulations.
- MaxEnt: species distribution modeling.
- NetLogo or Mesa (Python): agent-based models of flocks, swarms, and colonies.
Running the same software that publishing scientists run changes how research feels. You are not playing a simplified version of the field. You are using the real one.
Public databases that count as real data
Re-analyzing public data is a complete research path on its own.
Species occurrence and citizen science
- iNaturalist: photo-verified species observations worldwide.
- eBird: bird sightings with effort metadata, perfect for distribution and phenology studies.
- GBIF: aggregates hundreds of millions of biodiversity records across taxa.
Animal movement and tracking
- Movebank: GPS and tag tracks for thousands of tagged animals.
- NOAA stock-assessment data: fisheries time series.
Audio
- Macaulay Library (Cornell): curated animal sound archive.
- Xeno-canto: open-license bird and bat recordings worldwide.
Genomes, proteins, and sequences
- NCBI GenBank: nucleotide and protein sequences across all species.
- NCBI Pathogen Detection: livestock-associated pathogen and AMR data.
- Ensembl: genome browsers and ortholog tables.
- UniProt: protein function, domain, and variant annotation.
- AlphaFold DB: predicted structures for nearly every protein in UniProt.
- PDB: experimentally solved protein structures.
Expression, cells, and tissues
- Tabula Muris and Human Cell Atlas: single-cell RNA-seq across tissues.
- GTEx: tissue-specific gene expression and splicing.
- Human Protein Atlas: subcellular microscopy images of human proteins.
Environment and remote sensing
- NEON: ecological observatory data across U.S. sites.
- NOAA and Landsat / Sentinel imagery: weather, ocean, and land-cover layers.
Physiology and benchmark datasets
- PhysioNet: ECG and physiological time series, some from animals.
- Kaggle: curated animal datasets, often with starter notebooks.
A well-designed re-analysis of any of these can be the entire project.
How to combine wet and dry: the strongest project shape
Judges reward projects that connect a biological question to a quantitative method. Two patterns work especially well.
Pattern A: Home experiment plus computational analysis. You run a controlled trial on invertebrates or backyard wildlife, record it on your phone, and analyze it with DeepLabCut, OpenCV, or Fiji. The biology is real, and the analysis pipeline is publishable-quality. A mealworm personality study, a Daphnia heart-rate Q10 fit, or a planarian regeneration time-lapse all fit here.
Pattern B: Public data plus a custom model. You download a large public dataset, formulate a sharp hypothesis it has not been used to test, and answer it with a classifier, regression, or simulation. A species-distribution model on iNaturalist plus climate layers, a transformer on GTEx splicing, or a phylogenetic comparative model of the island rule all fit here.
Either shape signals to a judge that you understand both the organism and the math.
Choosing a phenomenon that has not been done
Originality is a search problem, not a forbidden-topic list. Use this 3-step check before you commit.
- Google Scholar: search your phenomenon in quotes plus the species name. Read the three most-cited recent papers. Note what they did and what they say is unresolved.
- Society for Science abstracts archive: search the ISEF and Regeneron STS public abstract databases for your keywords. If a project looks identical, change one of the three knobs in your design (organism, manipulation, or measurement method).
- PubMed and bioRxiv: search for the latest preprints, especially review articles. Reviews end with "future directions" sections that are essentially a list of unanswered questions.
Finding adjacent prior work is good news, not bad news. It means your question lives in a real conversation, and you can point judges to the exact gap your project fills.
A realistic timeline
- 1 to 2 weeks: a focused replication or measurement, like a Daphnia heart-rate vs temperature curve, or a re-analysis of one public dataset.
- 1 to 2 months: a full hybrid project for a regional fair, with a home experiment, a tracked or modeled analysis, and a statistical comparison.
- Full year: an ISEF-track project, with pre-registered hypotheses, multiple cohorts, a custom model or simulation, and a written paper.
If this is your first research project, start with the 1 to 2 week version and let it grow.
A starter checklist
Before you pick a specific phenomenon, set up these prerequisites.
- A clean, well-lit workspace with a tripod or clamp for your phone.
- A free Google Colab account and a free GitHub account.
- A local Python environment (Anaconda or uv) with NumPy, pandas, scikit-learn, BioPython, and OpenCV installed.
- Fiji, BORIS, and Audacity installed locally; DeepLabCut available on Colab.
- A bound lab notebook (paper or digital) where every trial gets a date, ID, and condition.
- A short ethics review of your design: invertebrates, citizen-science data, and computational projects usually pass quickly; vertebrate work needs SRC/IACUC paperwork before you start.
- A written one-line research question in the form "Does X affect Y in species Z, measured by method M?"
If you have these seven, you are ready to pick a phenomenon.
Where to go next
Animal Sciences has eight ISEF subcategories. Each one has its own MehtA+ project guide that builds on the kit and software on this page. Pick the one that pulls you in.
- Animal Behavior (BEH): how animals move, choose, communicate, and learn.
- Cellular Studies (CEL): cell-level biology of animals, including stress, aging, and drug response.
- Development (DEV): how embryos, larvae, and juveniles grow, regenerate, and metamorphose.
- Ecology and Agriculture (ECO): animals in their environments, including pest control, biodiversity, and food systems.
- Genetics (GEN): heritable variation, genomics, and computational comparative genetics.
- Nutrition and Growth (NTR): how diet shapes growth, reproduction, and condition.
- Physiology (PHY): heart rate, respiration, biomechanics, and thermoregulation in whole animals.
- Systematics and Evolution (SYS): phylogenies, species boundaries, selection, and convergent evolution.
- Other (OTH): cross-disciplinary work, including welfare ML, one-health dashboards, and bioacoustic hardware.
Pick the subcategory that interests you most and open its guide. The instruments are no longer the bottleneck. Your question is.
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