The Citizen (Gauteng)

Spo ers take the snap out of crocs

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Cairns – Australia’s rugged crocodile country could become safer thanks to worldfirst drones which were given a test flight yesterday.

The hi-tech drones, known as “croc spotters”, were tested near Cairns, Queensland, patrolling along riverbeds and detecting animals as they went.

Armed with what designers say is a world-first artificial intelligen­ce algorithm, they can identify the reptiles in creeks, beaches and rivers.

Despite the animals’ formidable reputation, attacks from freshwater and saltwater crocodiles on humans are relatively rare in Australia.

But five attacks in Queensland’s touristic north in 2017-2018, including two fatal attacks, and unusual sightings more than 40km inland had authoritie­s concerned.

The technologi­cal solution came from adapting newly developed shark-spotting drones to detect a different kind of apex predator.

As the pilot operates the drone, the algorithm scans the video and sends an alert back to the pilot if it picks up on a threat below.

Designers say the algorithm is 93% accurate, while the naked eye is only about 16%-19%.

Mark Phillips from drone provider Westpac Little Ripper, said his team spent hundreds of hours feeding data into the technology.

“A lot of time above crocs, a lot of images fed into the algorithm as it’s a learning algorithm which means it then gets better at spotting,” he said.

“Different water conditions, sizes, shapes of the crocs, sitting still or swimming – it has to learn everything about them and can then make a better detection.”

University of Technology Sydney researcher Nabin Sharma said Queensland authoritie­s are keen to roll the technology out as part of their CrocWise Programme, which informs the public about crocodile population­s from a conservati­on perspectiv­e.

The new technology also allows pilots to relay informatio­n instantly to an app, that could be downloaded by the public.

“The difference is the lag, you’re virtually getting real-time informatio­n over the net, within one second instead of waiting 30 seconds for the informatio­n to appear,” Phillips said.

There are already more than 100 drones deployed by rescue services across Australia, mostly supporting emergency situations. –

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