With new technologies revolutionizing data collection, wildlife researchers are becoming increasingly able to collect data at much higher volumes than ever before. Now we are facing the challenges of putting this information to use, bringing the science of big data into the conservation arena. With the help of machine learning tools, this area holds immense potential for conservation practices. The applications range from online trafficking alerts to species-specific early warning systems to efficient movement and biodiversity monitoring and beyond.
However, the process of building effective machine learning tools depends upon large amounts of standardized training data, and conservationists currently lack an established system for standardization. How to best develop such a system and incentivize data sharing are questions at the forefront of this work. There are currently multiple AI-based conservation initiatives, including Wildlife Insights and WildBook, that are pioneering applications on this front.
This group is the perfect place to ask all your AI-related questions, no matter your skill level or previous familiarity! You'll find resources, meet other members with similar questions and experts who can answer them, and engage in exciting collaborative opportunities together.
Just getting started with AI in conservation? Check out our introduction tutorial, How Do I Train My First Machine Learning Model? with Daniel Situnayake, and our Virtual Meetup on Big Data. If you're coming from the more technical side of AI/ML, Sara Beery runs an AI for Conservation slack channel that might be of interest. Message her for an invite.
Header Image: Dr Claire Burke / @CBurkeSci
Explore the Basics: AI
Understanding the possibilities for incorporating new technology into your work can feel overwhelming. With so many tools available, so many resources to keep up with, and so many innovative projects happening around the world and in our community, it's easy to lose sight of how and why these new technologies matter, and how they can be practically applied to your projects.
Machine learning has huge potential in conservation tech, and its applications are growing every day! But the tradeoff of that potential is a big learning curve - or so it seems to those starting out with this powerful tool!
To help you explore the potential of AI (and prepare for some of our upcoming AI-themed events!), we've compiled simple, key resources, conversations, and videos to highlight the possibilities:
Three Resources for Beginners:
- Everything I know about Machine Learning and Camera Traps, Dan Morris | Resource library, camera traps, machine learning
- Using Computer Vision to Protect Endangered Species, Kasim Rafiq | Machine learning, data analysis, big cats
- Resource: WildID | WildID
Three Forum Threads for Beginners:
- I made an open-source tool to help you sort camera trap images | Petar Gyurov, Camera Traps
- Batch / Automated Cloud Processing | Chris Nicolas, Acoustic Monitoring
- Looking for help with camera trapping for Jaguars: Software for species ID and database building | Carmina Gutierrez, AI for Conservation
Three Tutorials for Beginners:
- How do I get started using machine learning for my camera traps? | Sara Beery, Tech Tutors
- How do I train my first machine learning model? | Daniel Situnayake, Tech Tutors
- Big Data in Conservation | Dave Thau, Dan Morris, Sarah Davidson, Virtual Meetups
Want to know more about AI, or have your specific machine learning questions answered by experts in the WILDLABS community? Make sure you join the conversation in our AI for Conservation group!
- @SamuelNtimale
- | Him
Samuel Nti, a conservationist at APLORI, uses bioacoustics to protect endangered birds. His current work focuses on the African Grey Parrot in Nigeria, where he employs Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM) to inform conservation strategies.

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- @Adrien_Pajot
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WILDLABS & Fauna & Flora
Hi! I am Adrien, a dedicated French ornithologist and engineer committed to biodiversity conservation. I joined the WILDLABS team as a project manager in October 2023!





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Building Animal Detect: Software tool to process wildlife data in minutes using latest cool tech.





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Worked as a mechanical engineer for a defence co, then software engineer, then for a research lab specialising in underwater robotics.



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Sustainability Manager for CERES Tag LTD. An animal health company; animal monitoring, conservation, & anti-poaching/ rural crime. Wildlife, livestock, equine & companion. #CeresTrace #CeresWild #CeresRanch





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- @carlybatist
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ecoacoustics, biodiversity monitoring, nature tech



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HaMaarag
Quantitative ecologist
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- @himalyanibex
- | He/him
Tech Entrepreneur, ex-Microsoft, ex-Google, believe in technology for greater good, insatiable curiosity towards seeking knowledge & understanding covering disciplines like game theory, mechanism design, economics, ecology, agent-based modeling etc. Hands on with IoT, AI/ML etc.
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- @emcandler
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- @frankglujan
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Cardiff University
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HawkEars is a deep learning model designed specifically to recognize the calls of 328 Canadian bird species and 13 amphibians.
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Hi together, I am working on detecting causalities between land surface dynamics and animal movement by using satellite-based earth observation data. As this is might be your expertise I kindly ask for your support...
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1 April 2025
$3 millions of funding for NGO in Brazil using AI for conservation / $ 3 milhões em financiamento para ONGs no Brasil que usam IA para conservação!
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I have been a bit distracted the past months by my move from Costa Rica to Spain ( all went well, thank you, I just miss the rain forest and the Ticos ) and have to catch up on funding calls. Because I still have little...
28 March 2025
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InsectSet459 - the first large-scale open dataset of insect sounds, featuring 26,399 audio clips from 459 species of Orthoptera and Cicadidae.
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Naturalis is looking for a postdoc in AI for Ultrasonic Bioacoustic Monitoring
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Description | Activity | Replies | Groups | Updated |
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MIT has this Moo Deng-based fun challenge! More seriously it relates to AI and human-nature interaction. I imagine people on Wildlabs would... |
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AI for Conservation | 1 hour 58 minutes ago | |
Hi Ethan, It's indeed a competitive area. My advice for you (and anybody else seeking a PhD supervisor)...Do background research on each individual potential supervisor and always... |
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Early Career, AI for Conservation, Animal Movement, Climate Change | 3 days 21 hours ago | |
Hi Nick,At Wildlife.ai, from the other side of the world, we would be happy to chat with you. PM if interested Victor |
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AI for Conservation, Emerging Tech | 1 day 23 hours ago | |
Hi everyone,What should we share or demo about Software Quality Assurance? Alex Saunders and I, the two Software QA people at Wildlife Protection Solutions (WPS) are going to... |
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Software Development, AI for Conservation, Open Source Solutions | 3 days 16 hours ago | |
My name is Frank Short and I am a PhD Candidate at Boston University in Biological Anthropology. I am currently doing fieldwork in Indonesia using machine-learning powered passive... |
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Acoustics, AI for Conservation, Animal Movement, Data management and processing tools, Early Career, Emerging Tech, Ethics of Conservation Tech, Protected Area Management Tools, Software Development | 2 weeks ago | |
This looks like a great application, thank you! I wonder if they are planning to run this study in future years. |
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AI for Conservation | 2 weeks 3 days ago | |
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Latin America Community, Acoustics, AI for Conservation, Camera Traps, Drones, Early Career | 2 weeks 6 days ago | ||
@LukeD, I am looping in @Kamalama997 from the TRAPPER team who is working on porting MegaDetector and other models to RPi with the AI HAT+. Kamil will have more specific questions. |
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AI for Conservation, Camera Traps | 3 weeks ago | |
Super happy to finally have Animal Detect ready for people to use. We are open for any feedback and hope to bring more convenient tools :) |
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AI for Conservation | 3 weeks ago | |
Hi Ștefan! In my current case, I am trying to detect and count Arctic fox pups. Unfortunately, Arctic fox does not seem to be included in the training data of SpeciesNet but... |
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AI for Conservation, Camera Traps | 3 weeks 1 day ago | |
Interesting. Thanks for the explanation. Nice to hear your passion showing through. |
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AI for Conservation, Camera Traps, Data management and processing tools, Open Source Solutions, Software Development | 3 weeks 3 days ago | |
📸 Do you use camera traps in your work? Take part in our survey!Hi everyone! I’m currently a final-year engineering... |
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Camera Traps, AI for Conservation, Data management and processing tools, Open Source Solutions, Software Development | 3 weeks 3 days ago |
Has anyone combined flying drone surveys with AI for counting wild herds?
14 April 2024 3:40pm
6 June 2024 2:48pm
The camera can be aimed at the greenhouse background, which is like a huge green screen. Inside the greenhouse there's only a few flying insects, and they would all have to fly between the optics and the wall or roof eventually. Or if the bot is flying, have it look upwards.
It's pretty much a programing question. Unfortunately I am not the type of person who is good at both building and troubleshooting hardware, and writing code. I took some programming back in college but I am not sure if I want to get myself up to speed. It's starting to sound like I need a few years of college before I can even get started. Which I already did, too bad none of it counts for anything anymore. Or I guess I can compete in the marketplace with people with real money behind them, which is the only thing that means anything. If you are brilliant and not funded, you might as well be a scarecrow.
3 April 2025 12:53am
Hi all, I'm the founder of a company in Texas that provides thermal drone surveying for private game ranches. Right now, we're doing everything completely manually in terms of counting during both the initial flight as well as the review. Automating our process with an AI program would be great, but there are multiple limitations I'd imagine:
1.) Thermal imaging has pretty poor resolution even when you're only 100 feet or so above the ground. We'll often need to bring the drone down even closer to identify a buck vs doe. I'd imagine an AI model would be even more limited by this poor resolution
2.) Using a visible zoom camera in tandem with the thermal can help with this issue, but then you are very limited. Thermal works great at night, but requires cool, cloudy days if you're wanting to fly in the daylight to use the optical camera. In Texas, these are few and far between.
3.) Even if you were to figure out everything else, there are often animals that rewuire a pilot to move the drone off its path in order to identify (for example if they're bedded down behind a tree we will often need to swing around to the other side.
If anyone is interested, we do record all of our surveys, so I have 1000+ hours of thermal footage of animals from whitetail deer to nilgai to zebra. I'd be happy to share this with someone who's interested in potentially building a model if they think they can solve the limitations.
Free Webinar by Nature FIRST: Bridging Ecology and ESG – Smarter Decisions with Knowledge Graphs
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Nature Tech for Biodiversity Sector Map launched!
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Desafio IA Natureza & Clima / AI Challenge: Nature & Climate
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Multiple grants
28 March 2025 1:42pm
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WILDLABS AWARDS 2024 - BumbleBuzz: automatic recognition of bumblebee species and behaviour from their buzzing sounds
12 April 2024 8:37am
12 April 2024 8:41pm
Super great to see that there will be more work on insect ecoacoustics! So prevalent in practically every soundscape, but so often over-looked. Can't wait to follow this project as it develops!
17 April 2024 10:23am
Thanks Carly! I will keep anyone interested in this project posted on this platform. Cheers
26 March 2025 8:08pm
Really looking forward to following this project. I'm very curious how you'll be able to tease out different species, particularly among species that feature a variety of worker sizes.
Ai agents for conservation
26 March 2025 8:08pm
Nature Tech Unconference - Anyone attending?
8 March 2025 12:11pm
15 March 2025 8:28am
Definitely!
21 March 2025 12:07pm
The Futures Wild team will be there :)
26 March 2025 7:54pm
Yep see you on friday
Generative AI for simulating landscapes before and after restoration activities
26 March 2025 1:59pm
26 March 2025 7:50pm
Yep we are working on it
#berlin #ia #paysage #naturetech #solutionsfondéessurlanature #greentech… | Olivier Rovellotti 🌍 | 11 comments
🌿 Quand la Technologie Devient L'alliée du Paysagiste 🌍 🎨 Imaginer & Générer Grâce à l’IA générative (Stable Diffusion, Segment Anything), on peut imaginer #Berlin plus verte et tester différents scénarios d’aménagement. Une nouvelle manière d'explorer les possibles, en s’inspirant des principes des plus grands (McHarg, Clément, Burle Marx). 🌳💡 https://lnkd.in/g-uM7d-k 📚 Apprendre Les plateformes comme NBS EduWORLD rendent les solutions fondées sur la nature plus accessibles à tous. https://lnkd.in/gnBTkyN5 🔎 Cartographier & Anticiper Des outils comme ecoTeka permettent d’identifier les espaces à renaturer en croisant données SIG et IA. Cartographie, suivi des arbres, calcul des services écosystémiques… https://lnkd.in/daTBxbwn 🔗 Réfléchir: Dans "Harnessing generative AI to support nature-based solutions", Sandra Lavorel et Al nous donne des pistes d'explorations pour aller plus loin https://lnkd.in/gSH6Au9s 💬 Et vous ? 🌱🤖 #IA #Paysage #NatureTech #SolutionsFondéesSurLaNature #GreenTech #Biodiversité #NBSEduWorld #FosterTheFuture #TeachFromNature #NatureBasedSolutions #ClimateChange #STEM | 11 comments on LinkedIn
1/ segment
2/remote unwanted ecosytem
3/get local potential habitat
4/generate
5/add to picture
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25 March 2025 7:10pm
AI Weather Quest
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13 March 2025 4:13pm
25 March 2025 11:54am
All sound, would be nice if there were only 5, though!
InsectSet459: an open dataset of insect sounds for bioacoustic machine learning
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Postdoctoral fellow in AI for Ultrasonic Bioacoustic Monitoring
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20 February 2025 9:55pm
21 March 2025 12:18pm
I'm sure others here can comment better than I on models for classifying animal sounds, but from an ML pint of view, a key concern is getting enough data. 10 recordings does not sound like a lot (although how long are they?) and 1000 epochs does sound like a lot. It is very possible that your model is just learning to memorize the inputs, and that it will generalise poorly.
Postdoctoral fellow in AI for Ultrasonic Bioacoustic Monitoring
21 March 2025 10:36am
Seeking Ornithologist Expertise on Quelea Bird Behavior
18 March 2025 6:20pm
BirdCLEF+ 2025: Resolviendo dudas, compartiendo ideas
18 March 2025 4:21pm
ICCB 2025 – Let’s Connect!
9 March 2025 5:06am
12 March 2025 1:55pm
Hi everyone, I’m excited to become a member of Wild Lab! I’m currently working on my master’s thesis, focusing on dormouse conservation. My research explores the behavioral responses of dormice to temperature and habitat patterns using camera trap data.
Additionally, I’d like to incorporate agent-based modeling to simulate species behavior. However, I’m a bit unsure about how to effectively apply modeling for predictions. If anyone here has experience with modeling, I’d love to connect and discuss!
Looking forward to learning from you all.
Best regards,
Nature FIRST Conference: Innovation and Collaboration in Conservation
11 March 2025 9:39am
Utilizing Artificial Intelligence to Reduce the Impact of Climate Change on Wildlife
10 March 2025 5:42pm
Sea turtle Bioacoustics Project
17 February 2025 8:16pm
7 March 2025 12:47pm
Hi Sam, I did my master's on hatchling turtle vocalisations and their role in nest emergence behaviours (currently under review for publication). I recorded nest emergence behaviour in-situ using microphones and camera traps. I worked with snapping turtles, but the methods could be quite useful. I would be happy to share my thesis if that would be helpful.
there are a few sea turtle papers that describe hatchling vocalisations but not many experiments testing hypotheses for these vocalisations.
here are some papers that could help you get you started:
Shoot me a message if interested in chatting more :)
7 March 2025 1:32pm
Hello Sam ...great work, would like to see the paper when it comes online. I would like to know about the device....Bests Zahir
10 March 2025 11:24am
That's amazing thanks so much!
Arctic Community Wildlife Grants Program
7 March 2025 3:59pm
Advancing Hierarchical Classification of Ocean Life
4 March 2025 10:09pm
4 March 2025 10:13pm
What are open source solutions anyway?
1 November 2024 2:21pm
11 December 2024 12:34pm
Open source technologies are a game-changer for biodiversity conservation. They give us the freedom to use, study, modify, and share vital tools and knowledge that help advance research in meaningful ways. For conservationists, this means we can adapt technologies to meet local needs, improve existing tools, and make new innovations available to everyone—creating a more collaborative and sustainable future for our planet.
It’s exciting to see the impact of open source in conservation already, with tools like Mothbox, Fieldkit, and OpenCTD helping to drive progress. I'm curious—how do the formal definitions of open source resonate with you? How do they shape the way we approach conservation?
Also, if you're interested in how open source AI can support conservation efforts, check out this article: Open Source AI Agents: How to Use Them and Best Examples.
Can’t wait to hear your thoughts! Let's keep the conversation going.
11 December 2024 9:04pm
Sorry to be a stickler on syntax when there is a richer discussion about community here - but I believe a true "open source" project is a functionally complete reference design that anyone can build upon with no strings attached. If the community isn’t provided with enough information to fully build and iterate on the design independently, then the project doesn’t truly meet the spirit of open source.
As a developer and engineer, I’ve observed that sometimes projects crowdsource free engineering work under the guise of being "open source." While this can have benefits, it can feel like asking for a free lunch from clients and customers.
Advanced features—like enterprise-level data management or tools for large-scale deployments—can reasonably remain proprietary to sustain the project financially. Transparency is critical here. If the foundational components aren’t fully open, it would be more accurate to describe the project as "community-driven" or "partially open." And as an engineer/developer I wouldn't be angry when I went to explore the project marked "open source" only to find that I have been lied to.
Just my two cents, and I really appreciate the thoughtful discussion here. The open source community has been a massive influence on me. Everything I do at work would not be possible without it. In many ways, "open source" or "public domain" projects represents the true know-how of our society.
4 March 2025 3:27pm
Thanks again for the interesting discussion everyone!
Just a note that while I touched on it in my opening post above, there were still questions in this thread about what open source tech means. I tried to address that in my new thread here:
Definitions for open source software & hardware and why they're important
27 February 2025 10:58am
28 February 2025 5:26pm
Thanks for this excellent and thought-provoking post, Pen. I agree this is a binary yes/no issue, but there is a spectrum. There could also be philosophical nuances. For example, does excluding honey from a vegan diet meet the ethical criteria of veganism? It's an animal product, so yes, but beekeeping generally doesn't have the same exploitative potential as cow, sheep, or pig husbandry, right? However, looking strictly at the definition, honey is out if you want to be vegan.
Back to software! Isn’t the main issue that companies falsely claim to offer open source hardware/software? To avoid this, do you then have to create an accreditation system? Who polices it? Is it fair? Would users care that their software has the accredited open source stamp of approval? Ultimately, we need definitions to define boundaries and speak a common language.
4 March 2025 3:21pm
Thanks @VAR1 great insights! Funny you mentioned the honey thing, @hikinghack said the same in response on the GOSH forum.
I think the point I'm trying to make with the vegan comparison is that while it might not be 100%, it is close enough for us to have productive conversations about it without running in circles because we can't even agree on what we are talking about.
As for open source tech, there actually is accreditation for open source hardware (at least of a sort). The Open Source Hardware Association has a fairly mature certificate program:
OSHWA Certification
Certification provides an easy and straightforward way for producers to indicate that their products meet a well-defined standard for open-source compliance.
I am genuinely undecided whether such a formal accreditation system is required for open source software. My undecided-ness comes back to the food/agriculture analogy, where a similar issue exists for organic certification. Being certified organic could possibly, in some cases, be beneficial. However, certification can also be very onerous for small organic farmers who can't afford to get it.
But before we even think about accreditation, I echo your last sentence that we need definitions to define boundaries. These definitions, as I argue in my original post above, is not only about principles and philosophy, they are also a practical necessity for enabling effective communication!
31 May 2024 5:47pm
Hi Johnathan,
There is a Canadian company more or less doing that. They have their own endurance drone and optical/thermal cameras. Very much keyed into surveys and they may have success given the number of helicopter accidents we have had in Western Canada. Not sure if the AI part is there yet.
I know they've done surveys with at least one department here but not much beyond that. I talked to one of the developers their just as a point of interest. The current leadership today looks different than I remember though.
Superwake
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