The Japan Times - To find out how wildlife is doing, scientists try listening

EUR -
AED 4.30605
AFN 77.455431
ALL 96.368843
AMD 446.825609
ANG 2.098861
AOA 1075.194297
ARS 1684.256833
AUD 1.75871
AWG 2.113454
AZN 1.990675
BAM 1.954163
BBD 2.357215
BDT 143.020165
BGN 1.955393
BHD 0.442026
BIF 3459.001738
BMD 1.172513
BND 1.513838
BOB 8.087224
BRL 6.349745
BSD 1.170314
BTN 105.638487
BWP 16.520088
BYN 3.433823
BYR 22981.246248
BZD 2.353818
CAD 1.612973
CDF 2620.565058
CHF 0.932962
CLF 0.027339
CLP 1072.493319
CNY 8.275653
CNH 8.268371
COP 4459.358408
CRC 582.814151
CUC 1.172513
CUP 31.071583
CVE 110.172687
CZK 24.225634
DJF 208.404491
DKK 7.470031
DOP 74.947522
DZD 152.069003
EGP 55.74336
ERN 17.587688
ETB 182.244576
FJD 2.663717
FKP 0.873318
GBP 0.876851
GEL 3.168164
GGP 0.873318
GHS 13.435742
GIP 0.873318
GMD 85.593444
GNF 10179.470725
GTQ 8.96349
GYD 244.814872
HKD 9.128872
HNL 30.812314
HRK 7.533513
HTG 153.270269
HUF 383.949754
IDR 19529.662388
ILS 3.757716
IMP 0.873318
INR 106.095444
IQD 1533.115418
IRR 49374.504122
ISK 148.206273
JEP 0.873318
JMD 187.502094
JOD 0.831307
JPY 182.852189
KES 150.926355
KGS 102.536535
KHR 4685.054462
KMF 492.45513
KPW 1055.256887
KRW 1731.578572
KWD 0.359668
KYD 0.975283
KZT 609.39939
LAK 25383.73123
LBP 104804.385472
LKR 361.926745
LRD 206.56692
LSL 19.820193
LTL 3.462125
LVL 0.709241
LYD 6.356647
MAD 10.76548
MDL 19.9313
MGA 5190.62869
MKD 61.534638
MMK 2462.590834
MNT 4159.343647
MOP 9.38044
MRU 46.393325
MUR 53.841242
MVR 18.068604
MWK 2029.39094
MXN 21.161231
MYR 4.807886
MZN 74.924535
NAD 19.820193
NGN 1700.342027
NIO 43.063917
NOK 11.861178
NPR 169.022099
NZD 2.017765
OMR 0.450856
PAB 1.170319
PEN 3.944495
PGK 4.965818
PHP 69.261539
PKR 329.157998
PLN 4.223168
PYG 7998.264228
QAR 4.265426
RON 5.089523
RSD 117.366736
RUB 93.397389
RWF 1703.465419
SAR 4.399723
SBD 9.650473
SCR 15.979173
SDG 705.269084
SEK 10.892648
SGD 1.514641
SHP 0.879688
SLE 28.264217
SLL 24587.000022
SOS 667.637746
SRD 45.244327
STD 24268.642774
STN 24.479385
SVC 10.24042
SYP 12966.090323
SZL 19.814313
THB 36.957449
TJS 10.790559
TMT 4.103794
TND 3.431525
TOP 2.823129
TRY 50.060647
TTD 7.942345
TWD 36.573601
TZS 2884.366813
UAH 49.399998
UGX 4161.513111
USD 1.172513
UYU 46.081389
UZS 14068.212388
VES 310.404955
VND 30844.1155
VUV 142.444053
WST 3.264212
XAF 655.405048
XAG 0.01819
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.168774
XCG 2.109233
XDR 0.815114
XOF 655.405048
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.49766
ZAR 19.7712
ZMK 10554.022157
ZMW 26.830405
ZWL 377.548567
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    23.43

    +0.55%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    76.26

    -0.98%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.4

    +0.51%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.72

    0%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    23.4

    +0.9%

  • RIO

    0.5000

    76.74

    +0.65%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    74.69

    +0.07%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    48.88

    +0.96%

  • AZN

    -1.2200

    90.29

    -1.35%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    14.64

    -0.68%

  • BP

    -0.3500

    35.53

    -0.99%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    58.37

    -0.67%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    12.54

    -0.16%

  • RELX

    0.2000

    40.28

    +0.5%

To find out how wildlife is doing, scientists try listening
To find out how wildlife is doing, scientists try listening / Photo: Rodrigo BUENDIA - AFP/File

To find out how wildlife is doing, scientists try listening

A reedy pipe and a high-pitched trill duet against the backdrop of a low-pitched insect drone. Their symphony is the sound of a forest, and is monitored by scientists to gauge biodiversity.

Text size:

The recording from the forest in Ecuador is part of new research looking at how artificial intelligence could track animal life in recovering habitats.

When scientists want to measure reforestation, they can survey large tracts of land with tools like satellite and lidar.

But determining how fast and abundantly wildlife is returning to an area presents a more difficult challenge -- sometimes requiring an expert to sift through sound recordings and pick out animal calls.

Jorg Muller, a professor and field ornithologist at University of Wurzburg Biocenter, wondered if there was a different way.

"I saw the gap that we need, particularly in the tropics, better methods to quantify the huge diversity... to improve conversation actions," he told AFP.

He turned to bioacoustics, which uses sound to learn more about animal life and habitats.

It is a long-standing research tool, but more recently is being paired with computer learning to process large amounts of data more quickly.

Muller and his team recorded audio at sites in Ecuador's Choco region ranging from recently abandoned cacao plantations and pastures, to agricultural land recovering from use, to old-growth forests.

They first had experts listen to the recordings and pick out birds, mammals and amphibians.

Then, they carried out an acoustic index analysis, which gives a measure of biodiversity based on broad metrics from a soundscape, like volume and frequency of noises.

Finally, they ran two weeks of recordings through an AI-assisted computer programme trained to distinguish 75 bird calls.

- More recordings needed -

The programme was able to pick out the calls on which it was trained in a consistent way, but could it correctly identify the relative biodiversity of each location?

To check this, the team used two baselines: one from the experts who listened to the audio recordings, and a second based on insect samples from each location, which offer a proxy for biodiversity.

While the library of available sounds to train the AI model meant it could only identify a quarter of the bird calls the experts could, it was still able to correctly gauge biodiversity levels in each location, the study said.

"Our results show that soundscape analysis is a powerful tool to monitor the recovery of faunal communities in hyperdiverse tropical forest," said the research published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications.

"Soundscape diversity can be quantified in a cost-effective and robust way across the full gradient from active agriculture, to recovering and old-growth forests," it added.

There are still shortcomings, including a paucity of animal sounds on which to train AI models.

And the approach can only capture species that announce their presence.

"Of course (there is) no information on plants or silent animals. However, birds and amphibians are very sensitive to ecological integrity, they are a very good surrogate," Muller told AFP.

He believes the tool could become increasingly useful given the current push for "biodiversity credits" -- a way of monetising the protection of animals in their natural habitat.

"Being able to directly quantify biodiversity, rather than relying on proxies such as growing trees, encourages and allows external assessment of conservation actions, and promotes transparency," the study said.

H.Hayashi--JT