Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy Ibis

Waterbird communities are potential indicators of ecological changes in threatened wetland ecosystems and consequently, a potential object of ecological monitoring programs. Waterbirds often breed in largely inaccessible colonies in flooded habitats, so unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) surveys provide...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Isabel Afán, Manuel Máñez, Ricardo Díaz-Delgado
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-12-01
Series:Drones
Subjects:
UAV
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2504-446X/2/4/42
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spelling doaj-0e574eb383704bd190b4c25b5b7688b02020-11-25T00:45:51ZengMDPI AGDrones2504-446X2018-12-01244210.3390/drones2040042drones2040042Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy IbisIsabel Afán0Manuel Máñez1Ricardo Díaz-Delgado2Remote Sensing and GIS Laboratory, Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC), 41092 Seville, SpainNatural Processes Monitoring Team, ICTS-RBD, Estación Biológica de Doñana, CSIC, 41092 Seville, SpainRemote Sensing and GIS Laboratory, Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC), 41092 Seville, SpainWaterbird communities are potential indicators of ecological changes in threatened wetland ecosystems and consequently, a potential object of ecological monitoring programs. Waterbirds often breed in largely inaccessible colonies in flooded habitats, so unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) surveys provide a robust method for estimating their breeding population size. Counts of breeding pairs might be carried out by manual and automated detection routines. In this study we surveyed the main breeding colony of Glossy ibis (<i>Plegadis falcinellus</i>) at the Do&#241;ana National Park. We obtained a high resolution image, in which the number and location of nests were determined manually through visual interpretation by an expert. We also suggest a standardized methodology for nest counts that would be repeatable across time for long-term monitoring censuses, through a supervised classification based primarily on the spectral properties of the image and a subsequent automatic size and form based count. Although manual and automatic count were largely similar in the total number of nests, accuracy between both methodologies was only 46.37%, with higher variability in shallow areas free of emergent vegetation than in areas dominated by tall macrophytes. We discuss the potential challenges for automatic counts in highly complex images.https://www.mdpi.com/2504-446X/2/4/42UAVaerial surveylong-term monitoring<i>Plegadis falcinellus</i>bird censusessupervised classificationimage processing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabel Afán
Manuel Máñez
Ricardo Díaz-Delgado
spellingShingle Isabel Afán
Manuel Máñez
Ricardo Díaz-Delgado
Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy Ibis
Drones
UAV
aerial survey
long-term monitoring
<i>Plegadis falcinellus</i>
bird censuses
supervised classification
image processing
author_facet Isabel Afán
Manuel Máñez
Ricardo Díaz-Delgado
author_sort Isabel Afán
title Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy Ibis
title_short Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy Ibis
title_full Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy Ibis
title_fullStr Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy Ibis
title_full_unstemmed Drone Monitoring of Breeding Waterbird Populations: The Case of the Glossy Ibis
title_sort drone monitoring of breeding waterbird populations: the case of the glossy ibis
publisher MDPI AG
series Drones
issn 2504-446X
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Waterbird communities are potential indicators of ecological changes in threatened wetland ecosystems and consequently, a potential object of ecological monitoring programs. Waterbirds often breed in largely inaccessible colonies in flooded habitats, so unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) surveys provide a robust method for estimating their breeding population size. Counts of breeding pairs might be carried out by manual and automated detection routines. In this study we surveyed the main breeding colony of Glossy ibis (<i>Plegadis falcinellus</i>) at the Do&#241;ana National Park. We obtained a high resolution image, in which the number and location of nests were determined manually through visual interpretation by an expert. We also suggest a standardized methodology for nest counts that would be repeatable across time for long-term monitoring censuses, through a supervised classification based primarily on the spectral properties of the image and a subsequent automatic size and form based count. Although manual and automatic count were largely similar in the total number of nests, accuracy between both methodologies was only 46.37%, with higher variability in shallow areas free of emergent vegetation than in areas dominated by tall macrophytes. We discuss the potential challenges for automatic counts in highly complex images.
topic UAV
aerial survey
long-term monitoring
<i>Plegadis falcinellus</i>
bird censuses
supervised classification
image processing
url https://www.mdpi.com/2504-446X/2/4/42
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AT manuelmanez dronemonitoringofbreedingwaterbirdpopulationsthecaseoftheglossyibis
AT ricardodiazdelgado dronemonitoringofbreedingwaterbirdpopulationsthecaseoftheglossyibis
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