4.7 Article

A machine learning framework to classify Southeast Asian echolocating bats

期刊

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
卷 136, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2022.108696

关键词

Acoustic monitoring; Chiroptera; Echolocation; Southeast Asia; Machine learning; Supervised algorithm

资金

  1. Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC) EnvEast DTP scholarship [NE/L002582/1]
  2. NERC [NE/K016407/1]
  3. Mohamed bin Zayed species Conservation Fund [11253049]
  4. Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia [F07/FRGS/1878/2019]
  5. Global Biodiversity Information Facility through BIFA grant
  6. Ministry of National Development EDGE Scholarship
  7. US National Science Foundation [165871]
  8. Wildlife Reserves Singapore Conservation Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study presents a semi-automated framework for classifying bat calls in Southeast Asia, which can rapidly and accurately process large volumes of data, providing an alternative method for non-invasive monitoring of bats when species-specific classifiers are not yet feasible.
Bats comprise a quarter of all mammal species, provide key ecosystem services and serve as effective bio-indicators. Automated methods for classifying echolocation calls of free-flying bats are useful for monitoring but are not widely used in the tropics. This is particularly problematic in Southeast Asia, which supports more than 388 bat species. Here, sparse reference call databases and significant overlap among species call characteristics makes the development of automated processing methods complex. To address this, we outline a semi-automated framework for classifying bat calls in Southeast Asia and demonstrate how this can reliably speed up manual data processing. We implemented the framework to develop a classifier for the bats of Borneo and tested this at a landscape in Sabah. Borneo has a relatively well-described bat fauna, including reference calls for 52% of all 81 known echolocating species on the island. We applied machine learning to classify calls into one of four call types that serve as indicators of dominant ecological ensembles: frequency-modulated (FM; forest-specialists), constant frequency (CF; forest-specialists and edge/gap foragers), quasi-constant frequency (QCF; edge/gap foragers), and frequency-modulated quasi constant frequency (FMqCF; edge/gap and open-space foragers) calls. Where possible, we further identified calls to species/sonotype. Each classification is provided with a confidence value and a recommended threshold for manual verification. Of the 245,991 calls recorded in our test landscape, 85% were correctly identified to call type and only 10% needed manual verification for three of the call types. The classifier was most successful at classifying CF calls, reducing the volume of calls to be manually verified by over 95% for three common species. The most difficult bats to classify were those with FMqCF calls, with only a 52% reduction in files. Our framework allows users to rapidly filter acoustic files for common species and isolate files of interest, cutting the total volume of data to be processed by 86%. This provides an alternative method where species-specific classifiers are not yet feasible and enables researchers to expand non-invasive monitoring of bat species. Notably, this approach incorporates aerial insectivorous ensembles that are regularly absent from field datasets despite being important components of the bat community, thus improving our capacity to monitor bats remotely in tropical landscapes.

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