Ignition for a visionary platform for wildlife monitoring in the Carpathian Mountains
WildAI [eye], a project dedicated to innovative wildlife monitoring in the Carpathians, has officially started through a partners’ meeting that took place at WWF headquarters in Zurich. Through the pilot programme, the vision is to gather and analyse into a single platform multi-sensor data in real time in order to inform management decisions and scientific knowledge that can benefit not only wildlife, but also local economies in the Carpathians and beyond, in a truly integrated nature-tech project.
Europe has few places where nature is still preserved in its wildest state. These wild areas have a major impact on the wellbeing of our natural environment, but their resilience relies on making informed decisions which help to balance the goods and services wild nature provides. The pilot programme will have in view the Southern Carpathians located in Romania, with a special focus on a Natura 2000 site of 59,000 ha, the Tarcu Mountains, home to an ambitious European bison rewilding initiative.
WildAI [eye] envisions increasing the impact of wildlife monitoring, by designing an AI (artificial intelligence) system that contains small GPS trackers that can be attached to bison and large carnivores and other large mammals. This project is the launch-pad to produce cost-effective tools for large-scale wildlife monitoring adapted to the tricky terrain in the Carpathians. Automated data acquisition from the field will help address challenges faced by managers of protected areas who have used tools that depend of the accuracy of data and limited physical resources. It will be a great resource for scientists too, who will be able to design studies of the species and habitats more accurately and draw conclusions on further introductions of bison in the wild. Furthermore, there is a need to replace expensive collars connected to satellite with a cheaper and real time solution.
The monitoring will be made through wearable GPS trackers based on LoRaWAN radio networking technology that sends information to a cloud (server) about the position of the bison. Through labeling information in databases and combining inputs about weather conditions, altitude, vegetation, the system will enable data analysts to interpret and contextualise bison behaviour. The GIS (Geographic Information System) platform will generate complex map visualizations and inform management decisions. Blockchain will be an interesting addition, since there is a big need to evaluate the potential investments in the area from people interested to protect nature. This could be achieved by translating the value of ecological services in the area.
Besides a strong international presence from WWF International and WWF Switzerland, with WWF-Romania as the testing ground and expert support from bison specialists of Vanatori Neamt Nature Park, the first bison rewilding site in Romania, the launch meeting was joined by the hardware partner Miromico in charge of IoT integration (Internet of Things) and representatives of Porini Foundation and ETH Zurich, that are promoting blockchain in sustainability systems. Miromico is the winner of seed funding through a challenge raised by WWF-Romania and supported by Impact Hub as part of a Horizon 2020 programme. Boutique data science consultancy Ars Analitica took part in the launch meeting remotely, to instil a better understanding of how much further we can get with predictions made with the help of machine learning (AI). The partnership is joined by ESRI, a global authority in GIS.
A team of 6 young professionals from Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Romania and Sweden are coming on the frontlines of this project as a field resource for the international multi-disciplinary team described above. The 6 interns are part of WWF’s Bison Hillock field research programme started in 2016 with financial support from the Swiss-Romanian Cooperation Programme and now maintained annually through a grant from WWF International’s Volunteering Programme.
“We full heartedly believe that bison rewilding offers a unique opportunity to design a systemic intervention at landscape level, starting with this keystone species and the valuable wilderness of the Carpathian ecoregion”, says project driver Oana Mondoc of WWF-Romania.
WildAI [eye] counts to find further financial support in the future by demonstrating the impact of bison to the world and close the loop by jig staring a local micro economy designed around the wellbeing of wild nature. The Carpathian Mountains are one of Europe’s richest biodiversity reservoirs, where emblematic species like the brown bear, grey wolf, Eurasian lynx and, recently, the European bison live. In 2013, WWF and Rewilding Europe started an ambitious bison rewilding initiative in the Tarcu Mountains in Romania. The bison, as a wild large herbivore, is a key instrument for naturally restoring degraded or vulnerable areas, as they help maintain the diversity and richness of these landscapes, by creating corridors for the movement of other animals through its browsing capacity and big home range.
WildAI [eye] is WWF-Romania’s first pilot as a “Panda Lab”. Through Panda Labs, WWF works with technology, business, design, academia and conservation to develop new approaches of solving our planet's most stringent problems. Panda Lab is to become WWF Romania’s decentralised accelerator, a community for problem-solving aiming to attract partners and finance gradually.
You can keep an eye on the initiative here and don’t hesitate to get in touch with the team.