Autonomous camera traps for insects provide a tool for long-term remote monitoring of insects. These systems bring together cameras, computer vision, and autonomous infrastructure such as solar panels, mini computers, and data telemetry to collect images of insects.
With increasing recognition of the importance of insects as the dominant component of almost all ecosystems, there are growing concerns that insect biodiversity has declined globally, with serious consequences for the ecosystem services on which we all depend.
Automated camera traps for insects offer one of the best practical and cost-effective solutions for more standardised monitoring of insects across the globe. However, to realise this we need interdisciplinary teams who can work together to develop the hardware systems, AI components, metadata standards, data analysis, and much more.
This WILDLABS group has been set up by people from around the world who have individually been tackling parts of this challenge and who believe we can do more by working together.
We hope you will become part of this group where we share our knowledge and expertise to advance this technology.
Check out Tom's Variety Hour talk for an introduction to this group.
Learn about Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects by checking out recordings of our webinar series:
- Hardware design of camera traps for moth monitoring
- Assessing the effectiveness of these autonomous systems in real-world settings, and comparing results with traditional monitoring methods
- Designing machine learning tools to process camera trap data automatically
- Developing automated camera systems for monitoring pollinators
- India-focused projects on insect monitoring
Meet the rest of the group and introduce yourself on our welcome thread - https://www.wildlabs.net/discussion/welcome-autonomous-camera-traps-insects-group
Group curators
- @tom_august
- | he/him
Computational ecologist with interests in computer vision, citizen science, open science, drones, acoustics, data viz, software engineering, public engagement



- 8 Resources
- 54 Discussions
- 5 Groups



- 9 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 9 Groups
No showcases have been added to this group yet.
Ecologist at Noe NGO, Project manager in restauration, rewilding, and citizen sciences program for grassland ecosystems and wild pollinators

- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 7 Groups
- @capreolus
- | he/him
Capreolus e.U.
wildlife biologist with capreolus.at





- 1 Resources
- 78 Discussions
- 16 Groups
Research software engineer working in computer vision for animal behaviour
- 1 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 13 Groups
Professor of Computer Science researching theory and application of technology to insect pollination and management in natural and agricultural ecosystems.
- 0 Resources
- 2 Discussions
- 1 Groups
- @ppalencia
- | Dr
I am Pablo Palencia, a postdoctoral researcher at Biodiversity Research Institute (IMIB). I am interested on develop and fine-tuning cutting-edge tools for wildlife management and conservation, wit a special mention of camera trapping ;)
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 7 Groups
Natural Solutions
Computational ecologist - Engineer at Natural Solutions (France)



- 0 Resources
- 1 Discussions
- 13 Groups
- @Gcharron
- | Mr.
Cofounder of Outreach Robotics, I have a master in mechanical engineering and I thrive on developing new technology for field scientists using remote controlled robots.


- 1 Resources
- 15 Discussions
- 4 Groups
- @avilabon
- | He/Him/His
My name is Albert Vila, and I have a multidisciplinary background in earth sciences, design, and technology. I hold degrees in Environmental Sciences, GIS, Bioarchitecture, and Emerging Futures Design. My work focuses on biodiversity, natural areas, and technology.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 5 Groups
A researcher from Monash University working on developing Computer Vision facilitated insect monitoring systems for agriculture and entomology.


- 0 Resources
- 3 Discussions
- 2 Groups
Wildlife Drones
Wildlife Drones has developed the world’s most innovative radio animal-tracking system using drones so you can track your radio-tagged animals like never before.


- 18 Resources
- 8 Discussions
- 31 Groups
Research technician at the New Zealand Arthropod Collection. Interests include combining machine learning and computer vision in entomology.
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 1 Groups
- 0 Resources
- 0 Discussions
- 3 Groups
This position focuses on the ecology aspect of the project, while a second PhD in Ilmenau will be dealing with programming/AI development. Because of the high temporal resolution of our data, we can investigate how land...
9 January 2023
a technology-led solution to understanding the honeybees of the wasp world
8 December 2022
In case you missed our webinar on Pollinator monitoring, here is the recording. We had presentations from three teams who will be presenting their work in designing automated monitoring tools for flower-visiting...
17 November 2022
Five articles that include conservation tech published at Mongabay
20 October 2022
Nice overview paper on technological advances to improve insect monitoring
16 September 2022
Job opening at the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology
19 August 2022
December 2023
event
November 2023
Description | Activity | Replies | Groups | Updated |
---|---|---|---|---|
This video is so great - I don't know what I was imagining that you were building, but this is so much bigger and more involved than whatever I was vaguely thinking. Really cool... |
|
Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects | 2 years 5 months ago | |
Hey Tom,Since the output is dependent on a couple of factors such as the solar irradiance of the place, shading from the canopy, the type of solar panels (mono, poly or amorphous... |
|
Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects, Build Your Own Data Logger Community, Camera Traps, Conservation Tech Training and Education, Sensors | 2 years 6 months ago | |
Awesome! it would be great to hear how you get on, maybe you can share your results here when you have them. Is the camera only for the Pi? That could be a problem for scaling as... |
+7
|
Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects, Sensors | 2 years 8 months ago | |
Hi Julien, we are working with the Luxonis OAK-1 which can run lightweight detection models (e.g. YOLOv5n/s) directly on-device. However you will still need a host, for... |
|
Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects | 2 years 9 months ago | |
My most prized camera trap image - a hummingbird caught on camera! |
|
Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects, Camera Traps | 2 years 10 months ago | |
Might be good to add this to the 'Automated Camera Traps for Insects' group |
|
Camera Traps, Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects | 2 years 10 months ago | |
Have you considered creating a Kaggle competition? If you already have lots of images, and some that have been labelled, then this could be a good way to get people working on a... |
|
AI for Conservation, Autonomous Camera Traps for Insects, Camera Traps | 3 years ago |