4.6 Article

Acoustic identification of Mexican bats based on taxonomic and ecological constraints on call design

Journal

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 7, Issue 9, Pages 1082-1091

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210X.12556

Keywords

acoustic identification; guild; hierarchical classification; machine learning; Neotropical; random forest; whispering bats

Categories

Funding

  1. CONACYT [310731]
  2. Cambridge Commonwealth European and International Trust [301879989]
  3. Rufford Foundation [12059-1]
  4. American Society of Mammalogists
  5. Bat Conservation International
  6. Idea Wild
  7. Whitmore Trust
  8. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/K015664/1]
  9. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/K015664/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  10. EPSRC [EP/K015664/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Monitoring global biodiversity is critical for understanding responses to anthropogenic change, but biodiversity monitoring is often biased away from tropical, megadiverse areas that are experiencing more rapid environmental change. Acoustic surveys are increasingly used to monitor biodiversity change, especially for bats as they are important indicator species and most use sound to detect, localise and classify objects. However, using bat acoustic surveys for monitoring poses several challenges, particularly in megadiverse regions. Many species lack reference recordings, some species have high call similarity or differ in call detectability, and quantitative classification tools, such as machine learning algorithms, have rarely been applied to data from these areas. Here, we collate a reference call library for bat species that occur in a megadiverse country, Mexico. We use 4685 search-phase calls from 1378 individual sequences of 59 bat species to create automatic species identification tools generated by machine learning algorithms (Random Forest). We evaluate the improvement in species-level classification rates gained by using hierarchical classifications, reflecting either taxonomic or ecological constraints (guilds) on call design, and examine how classification rate accuracy changes at different hierarchical levels (family, genus and guild). Species-level classification of calls had a mean accuracy of 66%, and the use of hierarchies improved mean species-level classification accuracy by up to 6% (species within families 72%, species within genera 712% and species within guilds 691%). Classification accuracy to family, genus and guild-level was 917%, 778% and 825%, respectively. The bioacoustic identification tools we have developed are accurate for rapid biodiversity assessments in a megadiverse region and can also be used effectively to classify species at broader taxonomic or ecological levels. This flexibility increases their usefulness when there are incomplete species reference recordings and also offers the opportunity to characterise and track changes in bat community structure. Our results show that bat bioacoustic surveys in megadiverse countries have more potential than previously thought to monitor biodiversity changes and can be used to direct further developments of bioacoustic monitoring programs in Mexico.

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