by Playfuls Staff |
18th February 2007

In the bayous of eastern Arkansas, amidst ancient trees both
living and dead that provide nourishment to creatures of the swamp, hangs a
high-tech sentinel patiently waiting to capture video of an elusive bird once
thought to be extinct. [more]
Developed by researchers from the University
of California, Berkeley,
and Texas A&M
University, the high-resolution
intelligent robotic video system installed in the Bayou DeView area of the
Cache River National Wildlife Refuge in Arkansas
is part of a major effort to locate the ivory-billed woodpecker in its historic
habitat, the bottomland forests of the southeast United States.
If the researchers obtain conclusive photographic evidence
of the woodpecker, it will settle a debate that has become heated in recent
years and fascinated millions of people around the world, from bird-watchers
and environmentalists to Arkansas
farmers and duck hunters.
In the meantime, the new robotic video system provides
detailed video sequences of other birds, suggesting a new high-tech approach to
doing field biology work.
Ken Goldberg, a UC Berkeley professor of industrial
engineering and operations research, and of electrical engineering and computer
sciences, will present initial samples from this video system on Saturday, Feb.
17, at a news briefing on the future of robotics at the annual meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in San Francisco.
The robotic video system is part of a new project, called
Collaborative Observatories for Natural Environments (CONE) and funded by the
National Science Foundation, to develop automated systems that can observe and
record detailed natural behavior in remote settings. Goldberg and his former
graduate student, Dezhen Song, now an assistant professor of computer science
at Texas A&M, are co-principal investigators of the project.
In the early stages of the video system's development,
Goldberg worked with Robert Full, professor of integrative biology and director
of the Poly-PEDAL (Performance, Energetics, Dynamics, Animal Locomotion)
Laboratory at UC Berkeley. "We call it COLABCAM for collaborative lab
camera, and it is meant to show experiments in progress on animals to our robot
collaborators," said Full, who will join Goldberg at the AAAS robotics
briefing. Full will be presenting his work on bio-inspired robots.
"What Goldberg has now done is take this lab camera
into the field," said Full.
Goldberg and Song recently teamed up with researchers from
the Lab of Ornithology at Cornell
University to help look
for the ivory-billed woodpecker, also reverently referred to as the "Lord
God bird" or the "Holy Grail of bird-watching." The search
throughout the Southeast is being led by U.S. Fish & Wildlife and in the
Cache River Refuges of Arkansas by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission.
The bird, standing 18 to 20 inches tall with a wingspan of
30 to 31 inches, was considered the largest woodpecker north of Mexico when it
vanished more than six decades ago. It feasts on beetle larvae that inhabit the
dead or dying trees of the bottomland wilderness - or what remains of it - in
the southeast United States.
It had been feared extinct for decades until sightings in
recent years revived hopes of the species' survival. However, most eyewitness
observations of the woodpecker were made while the bird was flying through
dense forests, making it difficult to obtain photographic evidence of the
sightings. Yet, in 2004, biologists made national news headlines when they
captured a few seconds of video of what appears to be an ivory-billed
woodpecker.
But those sightings also generated their share of
controversy, with skeptics claiming that the fuzzy image in the video, taken by
David Luneau, associate professor of electronics at the University
of Arkansas at Little Rock, actually depicted a common
look-alike bird, the pileated woodpecker.
Hopes that the ivory-billed woodpecker survived extinction
were renewed last September along the Florida Panhandle when another team of
scientists from Auburn and Windsor universities reported sightings and
retrieved a number of audio recordings of the bird's distinctive double knock.
Still, none of the evidence to date has provided the definitive proof of the
bird's existence that skeptics demand.
"A single photographic frame would have to clearly show
the unique markings of the ivory-billed woodpecker," said Goldberg.
"Much better would be a high-resolution video clip that would also capture
its unique wing and flight patterns."
The researchers note that simply pointing video cameras at
the sky and recording is not practical, as the images would quickly fill up the
computer's hard drive. The challenge, they say, is for the software to automatically
recognize when animals are present. "Passive infrared (PIR) motion sensors
are sometimes used in wildlife research," said Goldberg, who has pioneered
networked teleoperation systems for more than a decade. "The problem is
that PIR sensors look for heat and are not triggered by birds flying overhead.
So we're developing a robotic system that analyzes high resolution video in
real time."
In February 2006, the Cornell researchers took Goldberg and
Song out to the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge to scout out potential
locations for placing the remote cameras. Because no one knows exactly where
the bird might appear, the cameras must cover a relatively wide swath of sky.
They settled upon a power line that cuts through the bayou
and provides a 50-foot-wide clearing unobstructed by trees.
"It's a natural bottleneck in the forest, and birds
passing through that corridor are relatively easy to spot because they expose
themselves," said Ron Rohrbaugh, project director at the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology. "At this location, we should have the highest probability of
capturing an image of the ivory-billed woodpecker."
With the generous help of the Arkansas Electric Cooperative,
a 69 kilovolt transformer was erected for the project that provides both a
power source and a post to mount the equipment. The researchers decided against
solar and battery cells because they would not provide a reliable enough power
source.
The two cameras - one pointing east and the other west - are
connected to a computer that processes the data. Waterproof gear helps protect
the equipment from the elements, including rain and wind, and even from
occasional bird droppings.
The researchers created software that keeps video files only
when potential "bird flight" movement is sensed.
The software is based on new algorithms that can handle the
unpredictable conditions of a natural environment, filtering out false readings
from clouds, water reflections and falling leaves. "The program knows, for
instance, that the ivory-billed woodpecker flies 20 to 40 miles per hour, so
anything outside that range is deleted," said Song, who worked with Ni
Qin, a computer science Ph.D. student at Texas A&M, on the software.
"The high-resolution camera we have shoots at 22 frames
per second, with approximately 2 to 3 megapixels per frame," said Song.
"That's a huge amount of data that must be managed."
Collecting the video data involves a decidedly low-tech
approach: Luneau takes a boat out to the site every two weeks to change the
disk.
Not only is Luneau skilled with computer equipment, he is an
avid bird-watcher and a leading member of the ivory-billed woodpecker search
team in Arkansas.
He does an initial screening of the images from the hard drive, and then sends
the data to researchers at Cornell,
Texas A&M and UC Berkeley.
And what if a high-quality image of the ivory-billed
woodpecker is captured? "If something really interesting is in the frame,
Cornell makes the call (on the identity of the bird)," said Song.
Rohrbaugh pointed out the benefits of using an autonomous
camera. "There are other ways of searching for the ivory-billed
woodpecker, but those ways usually involve a human positioned in the forest for
a very long time," he said. "Humans are expensive, and they're not
always alert, and their simple presence is a disturbance to the environment,
even when they're camouflaged and sitting quietly. Remote systems that can
serve as our eyes and ears are a big advantage."
Song also noted that using the camera extends the search
season to the entire year. "Usually people do this type of bird-watching
in the winter because there are fewer leaves, making it easier to spot the
woodpecker," Song said. "Also, in the summer, the temperature is hot,
it's swampy, and there are mosquitoes and snakes to deal with. Our system can
run the whole year, and it is not bothered by mosquitoes."
The researchers are continuing to fine tune the system and
algorithms while combing carefully through each new set of video that is
collected. "I'm a person who's been in the outdoors all my life, and I'm
trained as a wildlife biologist," said Rohrbaugh. "Certainly going
into this I had a lot of skepticism about the usefulness of this robotic
camera. But now there's hope that by using this camera, we can get a hi-res
image that is an indisputable piece of evidence that the ivory-billed
woodpecker is living in Arkansas."
However, the researchers also acknowledge the possibility
that the robotic cameras may never capture definitive footage of the famed
woodpecker.
"I'm hopeful, but not overconfident," Goldberg
said. "We're willing to run this camera for years, and we're prepared to
accept it if we never see the bird. But if this persistent robot out on the
bayou manages to capture verifiable high-resolution images of the legendary
ivory-bill, it would be a major discovery for scientists, for conservationists
and for more than 45 million American bird-watchers."