Crackling or desolate?: AI trained to hear coral's sounds of life
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[June 06, 2022]
By Angie Teo
(Reuters) - When a team of scientists
listened to an audio clip recorded underwater off islands in central
Indonesia, they heard what sounded like a campfire.
Instead, it was a coral reef, teeming with life, according to a study
scientists from British and Indonesian universities published last
month, in which they used hundreds of such audio clips to train a
computer programme to monitor the health of a coral reef by listening to
it.
A healthy reef has a complex "crackling, campfire-like" sound because of
all the creatures living on and in it, while a degraded reef sounds more
desolate, life sciences specialist and the team's lead researcher Ben
Williams said.
The artificial intelligence (AI) system parses data points such as the
frequency and loudness of the sound from the audio clips, and can
determine with at least 92% accuracy whether the reef is healthy or
degraded, according to the team's study published in Ecological
Indicators journal.
The scientists hope this new AI system will help conservation groups
around the world to track reef health more efficiently.
Coral reefs are under stress from human-driven carbon emissions that
have warmed ocean surfaces by 0.13 degrees every decade and increased
their acidity by 30% since the industrial era.
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A hydrophone that is used to record underwater soundscape is placed
on a reef in the sea of the Spermonde archipelago, South Sulawesi
province, Indonesia, August 30, 2018. Tim Lamont/University of
Exeter/Handout via REUTERS
About 14% of the world's coral on reefs was lost
between 2009 and 2018, an area 2.5 times the Grand Canyon National
Park in the United States, according to the Global Coral Reef
Monitoring Network.
While they cover less than 1% of the ocean floor, coral reefs
support more than 25% of marine biodiversity, including turtles,
fish and lobsters - making them fertile ground for global fishing
industries.
Indonesian conservationist and lecturer at the marine sciences
faculty of Hasanuddin University Syafyudin Yusuf said the research
would help in monitoring reef health in Indonesia.
The researchers also hope to collect underwater recordings from
reefs in Australia, Mexico and the Virgin Islands to help assess the
progress of coral restoration projects.
(Additional reporting by Rahman Muchtar; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor
and Barbara Lewis)
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