AI gives wildlife security and digital identity
LANZHOU-While facial recognition technology continues to facilitate many aspects of human life, it is now also being applied to aid the protection of giant pandas.
A nature reserve in Northwest China's Gansu province has built an AI-enabled video monitoring system to better protect wild giant pandas. Installed with some 300 infrared cameras, the monitoring system is helping to ensure the health and safety of all 110 wild giant pandas in the reserve.
"By equipping the AI-aided system to retain scores of archived photos of giant pandas, we can obtain a 98 percent recognition success rate," says Liu Xingming, head of the reserve's administration, adding that its success rate of recognizing other wild animals can top 80 percent.
The system can automatically recognize various wild animals caught by infrared cameras, allowing researchers to collect data on giant pandas and other wildlife while staying indoors.
In 2021, this monitoring system captured 2,896 photos of giant pandas and other rare animals, and filmed nearly an hour of footage, showing the nature reserve's sound ecological environment as well as a gradual rise in the giant panda population there.
The monitoring system was put into operation more than two years ago, and it has since captured scores of photos and videos of giant pandas engaged in activities such as eating, resting and fighting for mates.
Liu says that researchers used the system to not only observe the dynamics and health of the giant panda population, but also learn about changes in the natural and biological surroundings of their habitat.
"The system provided scientific data to help us grasp the living conditions of wild giant pandas and formulate conservation strategies. More importantly, it also provides real-time monitoring of the reserve, so that we can detect threats to the wildlife as early as possible," Liu says. "The monitoring system has enabled the systematic, scientific and intelligent conservation of wildlife."