The Timaru Herald

AI sorts prey

- Ryan Anderson

An animal photo booth is using artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to detect small and hard to find species – sorting pests from prey.

CritterPic, a trademarke­d animal detection system, was developed by Kiwi pest control company Critter Solutions after it realised how time-consuming and labour-intensive finding small species was in the field.

Birds, mice, lizards, skinks and more have all taken their turn posing in the booth.

Five years into a trial, Dr Helen Blackie and Dr Kenji Irie, the brains behind the booth, said rollout of the technology was planned for next year.

The booth was designed as a monitoring and surveillan­ce tool, Blackie said.

It used camera technology to take close-up photos of small species.

Thanks to its AI technology, as an animal walked into the booth, an image was sent in real-time to users, alerting them of species of interest – either pests or native threatened species.

The technology for the booth had been adapted into AI kill traps, so that the trap could make an in-the-moment decision on which species it was interactin­g with it and trigger the trap if it was a pest, Blackie said.

‘‘This ensures our native wildlife are safe whilst specifical­ly targeting pests.’’

As well as pest control, there were lots of lizards, frogs and invertebra­tes that could be difficult to find in New Zealand, so the technology helped to make assessment­s of these population­s.

While the photos taken made up the core of the technology, they also served to engage conservati­on and community

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