Drones help researchers fight against wildlife extinction
According to Claudio Sillero, professor of conservation biology at Oxford University and Born Free’s chief scientist, technology is changing the way conservation research is done — but it’s in an evolutionary way. As the technology gets better, cheaper and smaller, researchers get better at doing what they were already doing. For example, remote sensing used to be a very technical tool but is now ubiquitous, and everyone uses geographic information system (GIS) and global positioning system (GPS) for surveying.
“We started with handheld gadgets in the 1960s and now we are using satellites,” Sillero says.
“With sensors and probes we can go out into the ¿eld and measure virtually everything.”
“Universities are trying to keep up and provide facilities and courses but the drive comes from entrepreneurial students, individual research projects or small teams that embrace technology and pick up new stuff,” he said.
The emergence of affordable, recreational and commercial drones has been a ‘revelation’, said Melissa Schiele, a researcher with the Zoological Society of London.
“Innovative methodologies are being explored and the applications are being tried and tested around the world, on a plethora of species and in all environments. It’s seriously exciting.”
But researchers are still learning how to gather new types of imagery and pull new data sets from them.
Equally, teaching in university conservation and ecology courses differs. Some teach drone surveying methods in depth while others don’t even mention them.
“The fact is, using drones in itself is quite a leap into the interdisciplinary ‘unknown’ of engineering and piloting, and potentially an area where lecturers may not feel con¿dent to teach yet,” Schiele said.
“Ecologists are in the early days of of¿cially integrating this into the curriculum and it is gaining traction. It has to.”
Serge Wich, professor in primate biology in Liverpool John Moores University’s School of Natural Sciences, agreed: Students are taught about wellestablished technologies such as camera traps and automatic acoustic recorders, but drones are often missing from university teaching.
As a result, drone use among researchers is still fairly limited and focused on getting photos, he said.
Wich’s eclectic team of researchers used techniques from astronomy and machine-learning to develop a fully automated drone technology system that tracks and monitors the health of endangered animals around the globe. It’s designed to be cheap, robust and simple to use, so that local communities in developing countries can operate it independently without any technical background.
Thermal cameras allow detection of animals in the dark, which can then be classi¿ed automatically with imaging technologies used in astronomy, meaning researchers have the potential to monitor endangered animals more effectively than ever before.
Yet it’s not more widely used because few researchers have the skills to use this type of technology. In biology, where many people are starting to use drones, few can code an algorithm speci¿cally for their conservation or research problem, Wich said.
“There’s a lot that needs to be done to bridge those two worlds and to make the AI more userfriendly so that people who can’t code can still use the technology.”
The solutions are more support from tech companies, better teaching in universities to help students overcome their fears of coding, and ¿nding ways to link technologies together in an internet-of-things concept where all the different sensors, including GPS, drones, cameras and sensors, work together.