Using convolutional neural networks to count parrot nest‐entrances on photographs from the largest known colony of Psittaciformes

Author:

Zanellato Gabriel L.1ORCID,Pagnossin Gabriel A.2ORCID,Failla Mauricio3,Masello Juan F.45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fundación Soberanía Cinco Saltos Río Negro Argentina

2. Universidad Nacional de Río Negro General Roca Río Negro Argentina

3. Proyecto Patagonia Noreste Balneario El Cóndor Río Negro Argentina

4. Department of Evolutionary Population Genetics Bielefeld University Bielefeld Germany

5. Department of Biological Sciences University of Venda Thohoyandou South Africa

Abstract

AbstractCounting animal populations is fundamental to understand ecological processes. Counts make it possible to estimate the size of an animal population at specific points in time, which is essential information for understanding demographic change. However, in the case of large populations, counts are time‐consuming, particularly if carried out manually. Here, we took advantage of convolutional neural networks (CNN) to count the total number of nest‐entrances in 222 photographs covering the largest known Psittaciformes (Aves) colony in the world. We conducted our study at the largest Burrowing Parrot Cyanoliseus patagonus colony, located on a cliff facing the Atlantic Ocean in the vicinity of El Cóndor village, in north‐eastern Patagonia, Argentina. We also aimed to investigate the distribution of nest‐entrances along the cliff with the colony. For this, we used three CNN architectures, U‐Net, ResUnet, and DeepLabv3. The U‐Net architecture showed the best performance, counting a mean of 59,842 Burrowing Parrot nest‐entrances across the colony, with a mean absolute error of 2.7 nest‐entrances over the testing patches, measured as the difference between actual and predicted counts per patch. Compared to a previous study conducted at El Cóndor colony more than 20 years ago, the CNN architectures also detected noteworthy differences in the distribution of the nest‐entrances along the cliff. We show that the strong changes observed in the distribution of nest‐entrances are a measurable effect of a long record of human‐induced disturbance to the Burrowing Parrot colony at El Cóndor. Given the paramount importance of the Burrowing Parrot colony at El Cóndor, which concentrates 71% of the world's population of this species, we advocate that it is imperative to reduce such a degree of disturbance before the parrots reach the limit of their capacity of adaptation.

Publisher

Wiley

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