Maui News

AI detects two more bird species at Palmyra Atoll that hadn’t been seen in decades

Play
Listen to this Article
3 minutes
Loading Audio... Article will play after ad...
Playing in :00
A
A
A

  • Shearwater in burrow – credit Debbie Delatour.
  • Wedge Tailed Shearwater – credit DLNR.
  • Wedge Tailed Shearwater – credit DLNR.
  • Shearwater chick – Richard A Cooke III.
  • Wedge-tailed shearwater inside of a dugout nest with eggs, Moomomi Beach, Moloka’i.

The Nature Conservancy, Hawai’i and Palmyra announced that artificial intelligence or AI powered imagery analysis detected two more seabird species at Palmyra Atoll that hadn’t been seen in decades.

Using a Rapid Automatic Image Detection or RAIC tool developed by TNC partner Synthetaic, scientists were able to detect a blue noddy (Procelsterna cerulea) and a wedge-tailed shearwater (Puffinus pacificus) at Palmyra Atoll.  

Both birds were believed to have been extirpated, or made locally extinct, during World War II, likely due to disturbances to their habitat and the introduction of predatory, invasive rats.  

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

Earlier this year, a grey-backed tern chick was observed using the same technology.

RAICing for Blue Noddies in Coconut Palm crowns

How the technology works:

TNC gathers drone imagery to observe, measure and assess the health of the atoll ecosystem. While using drones minimizes human impact on the environment, it creates terabytes of data that is cumbersome for humans to analyze. Synthetaic’s AI tool analyzes the visual data to return matches for a given image, in this case, birds.  

Blue noddy. Credit Cameron Rutt

“We would never have found either of those birds looking at the image data on our own,” said TNC’s Island Resilience Lead Scientist, Alex Wegmann. “There was too much data, the imagery was too complex, and we were focusing on different bird species. By analyzing our data in RAIC, the information about these birds became accessible in a way it wouldn’t have been otherwise.”   

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

Starting in 2020, TNC and partners began working to return eight seabird species that are known to the region but not currently found on the atoll. TNC and the US Fish and Wildlife Service co-manage Palmyra Atoll as a TNC preserve and research station within a National Wildlife Refuge. Bringing the birds back is part of the long-term restoration of the atoll, which also includes eradicating the rats and restoring the tropical forest. 

Validation for management:

“Confirming more seabirds returning is a validating sign for the management actions we’ve taken since purchasing the atoll in 2000,” said Katie Franklin, Palmyra Island Conservation Strategy Lead. “Seabirds are important because their nutrient-rich guano plays a central role in the health of atoll ecosystems, including their resilience to climate change,” she said.  

Synthetaic partners with TNC through its AI for Impact program, through which the company collaborates with nonprofit organizations to help them harness RAIC for real-world results.  

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

Akasha Sutherland, Director of the AI for Impact Program said, “It’s an honor to put this tool in the hands of organizations tackling some of the most important problems in the world.” 

Other AI for Impact use cases have included search-and-rescue operations and identifying sources of methane emissions.

TNC’s experience using RAIC to successfully analyze drone footage demonstrates the value of this tool for conservation. In addition to helping TNC answer important questions about seabird populations and habitats, it will next become part of the measurement toolkit for a coalition doing similar restoration work at Teti’aroa Atoll.    

“I strongly believe that what we’re doing at Palmyra is scalable and repeatable, and tools like RAIC make that possible,” said Wegmann.   

Nesting Wedge-Tailed Shearwater birds seen at at Kilauea Point Refuge, Kauaʻi, Hawaiʻi. The Wedge-tailed shearwater is a pelagic seabird that only comes to land to nest. They are indigenous to Hawaiʻi.
ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsored Content

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Stay in-the-know with daily or weekly
headlines delivered straight to your inbox.
Cancel
×

Comments

This comments section is a public community forum for the purpose of free expression. Although Maui Now encourages respectful communication only, some content may be considered offensive. Please view at your own discretion. View Comments