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AI for Conservation / Feed

Artificial intelligence is increasingly being used in the field to analyse information collected by wildlife conservationists, from camera traps and satellite images to audio recordings. AI can learn how to identify which photos out of thousands contain rare species; or pinpoint an animal call out of hours of field recordings - hugely reducing the manual labour required to collect vital conservation data. The AI For Conservation group is intended to unite and inspire all WILDLABS community members—whether already involved in AI for conservation, or not—to understand how to use and/or directly contribute to open-source research and development efforts.

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What questions would you ask an AI agent for conservation tech?

If you had access to an agent trained specifically to provide guidance on conservation technology tools + methods, what would you ask it? It sounds like a lot of folks are...

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I think a conservation tech agent would be most useful if it connects directly to existing WILDLABS resources, rather than trying to replace tools.

Ideally, it could Link questions to projects from the WILDLABS Awards or The Inventory, as well Suggest relevant forum discussions Recommend community members with similar experience. An then at the end propose technical solutions like ML models, devices, or toolkits for specific tasks 

I'm thinking of doing something like...

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"How can I detect when an insect is attacking a tree using dendrometer data?"

agent

This is a time-series event detection problem. Based on previous project in WildLabs a BiLSTM neural network can be trained to recognise attack patterns by analysing the sequence of stem diameter changes before, during, and after an attack. These patterns may include sudden shrinkage or irregular oscillations caused by stress or resin production.

The agent could then link to:

  • Projects using sensors or time-series AI in behaviours or events monitoring
  • Open-source tools for LSTM-based classification
  • Forum threads or community contacts who’ve worked on similar topics, models, tools, etc

 

I agree with Jorge that an AI agent could be useful to help search the vast repository of existing discussions on WildLabs. For example: in this thread below, Maristela could have asked her question to the agent and (hopefully) been directed to the link that Akiba mentioned. 

https://wildlabs.net/discussion/advise-needed-close-focus-camera-traps

However, one issue I can see with using an AI agent instead of asking a question as currently, is if there is no record of the questions asked to the agent. A great strengths of WildLabs (and online forums) is that, because questions are recorded and visible, other members can learn from others' questions. If questions start being "hidden" in the agent's memory, other members can hardly learn from them.

Would love to collaborate on this we are curently building agents for conservation 
Kind regards
Olivier 

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Unlocking AI for Nonprofits: Enroll in Nethope's New AI Skills Course for Nonprofits

A free, self-paced course series for nonprofit professionals is available through August 31.

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discussion

A technical and conceptual curiosity... Could generative AI help us simulate or decode animal communication?

Hi everyone,I recently watched a talk by Aza Raskin where he discusses the idea of using generative models to explore communication with whales. While the conversation wasn’t...

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Hi Jorge, 

 

I think you'll find this research interesting: https://blog.google/technology/ai/dolphingemma/

Google's researchers did exactly that. They trained an LLM on dolphin vocalizations to produce continuation output, exactly as in the autoregressive papers you've mentioned, VALL-E or WaveNet.

I think they plan to test it in the field this summer and see if it will produce any interesting interaction.

Looking forward to see what they'll find :) 

Besides, two more cool organizations working in the field of language understanding of animals using AI:

https://www.projectceti.org/

https://www.earthspecies.org/

This is a really fascinating concept. I’ve been thinking about similar overlaps between AI and animal communication, especially for conservation applications. Definitely interested in seeing where this kind of work goes.

This is such a compelling direction, especially the idea of linking unsupervised vocalisation clustering to generative models for controlled playback. I haven’t seen much done with SpecGAN or AudioLDM in this space yet, but the potential is huge. Definitely curious how the field might adopt this for species beyond whales. Following this thread closely!

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discussion

Jupyter Notebook: Aquatic Computer Vision

Dive Into Underwater Computer Vision Exploration OceanLabs Seychelles is excited to share a Jupyter notebook tailored for those intrigued by the...

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This definitely seems like the community to do it. I was looking at the thread about wolf detection and it seems like people here are no strangers to image classification. A little overwhelming to be quite honest 😂

While it would be incredible to have a powerful model that was capable of auto-classifying everything right away and storing all the detected creatures & correlated sensor data straight into a database - I wonder if in remote cases where power (and therefore cpu bandwidth), data storage, and network connectivity is at a premium if it would be more valuable to just be able to highlight moments of interest for lab analysis later? OR if you do you have cellular connection, you could download just those moments of interest and not hours and hours of footage? 

Am working on similar AI challenge at the moment. Hoping to translate my workflow to wolves in future if needed. 

We all are little overstretched but it there is no pressing deadlines, it should be possible to explore building efficient model for object detection and looking at suitable hardware for running these model on the edge. 

 

 

Wow this is amazing! This is how we integrate Biology and Information Technology. 

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article

Leveraging AI & Big Data For Love Of The Environment

🔥 Excited to join the WILDLAB community! I’m Robert Chonge — a Full Stack Developer with a passion for AI and Big Data, now channeling that tech firepower toward environmental conservation.Let’s turn data into action...

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@RobertChonge , I'm into front-end development, UX, Design, and AI as well. Is there any projects you have going that we could collobrate on?
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discussion

Exploring the Wild Edge: A Proposal for a New WILDLABS Group

Over the past year, I’ve found myself returning again and again to one big question: How can we make conservation tech work where the wild really begins , where the signal...

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This sounds like a great idea, this is an area that I want to do more work in,

 

Where can I sign up.

 

 

Hey Stuart,

Thank you for your interest! We're glad you'd like to be part of our journey. We're still in the process of setting up the group, and we'll let you know as soon as we're ready.

Thanks for your understanding! 🤗 

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discussion

Software for tortoise re-identification

I was wondering whether anybody has come across AI-software that would be able to re-identify animals - I am looking for a tool to re-identify giant tortoises.I have a small group...

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We would be happy to explore supporting this in the Internet of Turtles (iot.wildbook.org). We support marine and terrestrial species, and the HotSpotter (SIFT) and MiewID v3 algorithms for re-ID would likely have good zero-shot matching potential.

Hi Jason, 
That sounds exciting. From what I understand, the Internet of Turtles focusses mainly on animals traveling long distances. The tortoises I am interested in re-identifying are limited in their range, as they the island they are on is quite small. Would that nevertheless be of interest for that database? And if so, how would you suggest to proceed? 

Also, I would generally interested to contribute to the Internet of Turtles with sea turtle photos. There are a lot of Green and Hawksbill sea turtles of various ages in the sea surrounding the island where I work, so I have requested an account via the website

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AI Pipeline for digitalisation of labels

Dear colleagues, I'd like to share with you the output of the project KIEBIDS, which focused on using AI to extract biodiversity-relevant information from museum labels. Perhaps it can be applied also to other written materials, more related to conservation? Have a look!

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discussion

Halow wifi, local AI, thermal + visible

I've just recently received a halow wifi bridge set. The pair I ordered claims up to 3km operation line of sight. Now I suspect that 2km line of sight might be more what one could...

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Thanks for sharing! I've been thinking about using WiFi links for some applications. Any idea how much power they require?

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discussion

Monitoring bat and bird collisions at MET Tower

I live in American Samoa where we have large populations of flying foxes, seabirds, and forest birds. There is a plan to build a 120 m met tower with 30 guy lines (10 lines in 3...

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Yes, thanks Riley and Kim. Someone suggested WIS and I am currently in discussions with them. Their system seems especially well suited for the purpose and I am hoping it works out.

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discussion

Tech for Impact Collaboration

Do you know a nonprofit or organization that is looking to work with students passionate about the environment?  Code the Change Harvey Mudd College is a ...

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discussion

🌊 FathomVerse mobile game debuts new features to help gamers participate in ocean exploration

The ocean is vast, mysterious, and full of charismatic critters that look like they belong in a sci-fi movie. But unlike outer space, you don’t need a rocket to explore it—just a...

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discussion

Try new SpeciesNet + Animal Detect combination online

Hey everyone,I am Eugene, a co-founder of Animal Detect together with @HugoMarkoff. For almost a year now we are building an online platform to upload -> filter -> classify...

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Great work @eugenegalaxy! Please consider Camtrap DP as one of your export formats.

Hey, you are asking the right kind of questions! There are quite a lot of things which make Animal Detect unique, while we constantly build on new and improved features. 

Currently, we are working with ViT models and different methods and algorithms in combination with classical detection models, to add even more true positive detections into classes, while also using these algorithms to suggest classes for images.

Our algorithms scales and works best on larger uploads of data, where we actually create a model from the data, while we run classification. 

While all of this is happening, we also help to sort the detections based on similarities, for a quicker way to re-classify and handle human-in-the-loop. 

I am trying to (if it works) upload a gif, where you can see a result from where we got detections of over 21.000 animals from about 6.000 images. What you will see is that the images are not sorted based on the label (even if you can filter them as you wish) but instead similarities. This makes the reviewing and adjustment of classes a breeze, compared to manually going through and spotting a black-backed jackals together with a mix of other types of animals. 

We are always open for feedback to improve this even further 😊

 

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discussion

Case Studies Wanted! How is AI already being used in the Ecology sector in the UK (and beyond?)

Hello Community!I am looking for AI case studies, specifically within the UK and Ireland, of where AI is being used in ecology and nature conservation. I am...

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Hi Sam,

I'm the Nature Tech and AI Innovation Manager at Conservation International, and we have a number of use cases of AI for different aspects of conservation (sustainable supply chains, restoration, nature finance, climate adaption, etc.). But, we work primarily across the Global South (Africa, Latin America, Asia-Pacific) so they aren't UK or Europe examples. Feel free to DM me if you'd like to chat more, if not for this podcast, just for general knowledge-sharing :)

-Carly

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ICCB 2025 – Let’s Connect!

Hi Everyone,I’m excited to be attending my first ICCB 2025 as a student presenter and early-career researcher! My work sits at the intersection of computational epidemiology and...

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Hey Stephanie, 

I have dropped you couple of links. I believe we also have a booth somewhere. 

 

Hi Stephanie,

It’s great to hear about your exciting work and that you’ll be attending ICCB 2025 — congratulations on presenting!

The Savannah Tracking team is participating at the exhibition, and we’d love for you to stop by our booth 15.

Given your previous interest in collaring domestic dogs and collecting high-resolution GPS data, it might be a great opportunity for us to connect in person and dive deeper into how our lightweight collar solutions — like those currently deployed on Dingoes — could support your project. We'd be happy to show you how our satellite-enabled collars work, demo our data platforms, and explore a potential fit for your needs.

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