Otago Daily Times

AI developed for lake weed

- JOHN LEWIS

A NEW weapon is being developed in the fight against invasive aquatic weeds and Lake Wakatipu will be among the first to reap its benefits.

Niwa researcher­s have developed a way to detect and identify submerged weeds, using a combinatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce and scientific ingenuity.

Freshwater ecologist Dr Daniel Clements believed it was the next step in protecting New Zealand’s lakes and rivers from invasive aquatic weeds.

Detection and management of the weeds costs millions of dollars annually, but the new technology would enable agencies to survey far larger areas more efficientl­y than possible now, and potentiall­y lead to much faster responses to new incursions.

‘‘Invasive submerged weeds can degrade water quality, exacerbate silt and flooding, reduce the number of native animals and plants and play havoc with irrigation water delivery and hydroelect­ric power schemes,’’ Dr Clements said.

Niwa had developed a portable invasive species detector module, with an underwater video camera attached, that can be strapped to survey boats.

An artificial intelligen­ce function was developed to train an onboard computer to recognise two of New Zealand’s worst invasive weeds — lagarosiph­on and hornwort.

It recorded their GPS locations on a map, which could be used by agencies to control or eradicate them.

Niwa had successful­ly processed video imagery captured from an autonomous boat in a flume facility in Hamilton, planted out with three different submerged plant species.

The research was still in its early days and required further fieldwork, data collection and software developmen­t to evaluate its true potential.

Dr Clements said it was hoped the detector would get some of its first trials on Lake Wakatipu and some North Island lakes where lagarosiph­on is in the early stages of invasion.

‘‘If you can detect high risk invasive species early, before they are widespread, and implement effective management strategies, you minimise the longterm economic, environmen­tal, social, recreation­al, and cultural impacts caused by these species.’’

Most invasive species surveillan­ce work was carried out by specialist divers.

The new technology had the potential to shift diver expertise from detection to implementi­ng control strategies, he said.

‘‘Real gains could be made by operating the modules from fully autonomous surface vessels that can be programmed and deployed without constant supervisio­n.’’

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 ?? PHOTOS: NIWA ?? What lies seneath . . . Niwa freshwater ecologist Dr Daniel Clements trials a susmerged invasive weed detector that uses artificial intelligen­ce in a test flume, in Hamilton. Inset: The detector correctly identifies invasive underwater plants in the test flume.
PHOTOS: NIWA What lies seneath . . . Niwa freshwater ecologist Dr Daniel Clements trials a susmerged invasive weed detector that uses artificial intelligen­ce in a test flume, in Hamilton. Inset: The detector correctly identifies invasive underwater plants in the test flume.
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