Cape Times

UCT student wins British ecology award

- Lisa Isaacs lisa.isaacs@inl.co.za

UNIVERSITY of Cape Town (UCT) ecologist Gabriella Leighton has won a British Ecological Society Young Investigat­or prize.

One of only five awarded each year, it recognises the best research papers published in society journals by early-career scientists.

Leighton, 23, won the Robert May Prize for the best paper in methods in ecology and evolution in 2016 for “Just Google it: assessing the use of Google Images to describe geographic­al variation in visible traits of organisms”.

The prize, which includes a year’s British Ecological Society membership plus a year’s subscripti­on to the journal, will be presented at the society’s annual meeting in Belgium, in December.

It is awarded for an important contributi­on in converting one aspect of field ecology to a desktop science, and Leighton’s paper shows how Google can help make ecology cheaper, faster and safer in the future.

Many species are difficult, time-consuming and sometimes dangerous to watch, and well-trained fieldworke­rs are expensive to employ. Ecoogy would be easier if experts had better ways of observing species, and images taken by amateur and profession­al photograph­ers, if geo-referenced, could be a rich source of ecological informatio­n.

Leighton analysed online image data across a range of species, from black bears in western North America to black sparrow hawks in South Africa, comparing data on their colour collected by fieldworke­rs with data from Google images, and found the online images are reliable.

To make the method accessible, Leighton’s paper includes a web applicatio­n, Morphic, that allows the approach to be widely implemente­d.

Leighton is reading for her master’s degree at UCT, where she completed her honours in biological sciences supervised by Dr Arjun Amar, a co-author of her paper.

“I am extremely honoured, I never thought I would get this award. I am only at the very beginning of my career. It is a huge accolade.”

She said her passion for ecology grew from her love of animals. “I decided to study zoology at a young age. I loved animals and nature, and have an appreciati­on for all kinds of animals, especially cats.”

 ??  ?? GABRIELLA LEIGHTON
GABRIELLA LEIGHTON

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