Imagine a world without birds: the ecosystem would fall apart, bug populations would skyrocket, erosion would be catastrophic, crops would be torn down by bugs, and so many other damages. Did you know that 1,200 species are facing extinction over the next century, and many more are suffering from severe habitat loss? (source).
Birds are fascinating and beautiful creatures who keep the ecosystem organized and balanced. They have emergent properties that help them react spontaneously in many situations, which are unique to other organisms.
Here are some fun facts: Parasitic jaegers (a type of bird species) obtain food by stealing it directly from the beaks of other birds. The Bassian Thrush finds its food using the most unique way possible: they have adapted their foraging methods to depend on creating a large amount of gas to surprise earworms and trigger them to start moving (so the birds can find and eat it).
Due to the intriguing behaviors of birds, I got inspired and lifted to create an app that could identify any bird which you are captivated by in real-time. I also built this app to raise awareness of the heart-breaking reality which most birds face around the world.
GLOBAL TRENDS OF BIRD SPECIES SURVIVAL CHART
I first researched bird populations, and their global trends form the data that contains the information of the past 24 years. I then analyze this data set and created interactive visuals using Power BI.
This chart displays the Red List Index (RLI) of species survival from 1988 to 2012. RLI values range from 1 (no species at risk of extinction in the near-term) down to 0 (all species are extinct).
As you click on the Power BI Line Chart you will notice that since 1988, bird species have faced a steadily increasing risk of extinction in every major region of the world (change being more rapid in certain regions). 1 in 8 currently known bird species in the world are at the threshold of extinction. The main reasons are degradation/loss of habitat (due to deforestation, sea-level rise, more frequent wildfires, droughts, flooding, loss of snow and ice, and more), bird trafficking, pollution, and global warming. As figured, most of these are a result of us humans. (source)
Due to industrialization, more than 542,390,438 birds have lost their lives. Climate change is causing the natural food chain to fall apart. Birds starve with lesser food (therefore have to fly longer distances), choke on human-made pollutants, and end up becoming weaker. I believe change is necessary, and with change comes compassion. This web app can help to build an understanding and empathy towards birds.
Let’s take a look at the Power BI reports and the web-app:
POWER BI REPORT: BIRD ATTRIBUTES
As you can see in this report, along with recognizing a specific bird in real-time, interactive visualizations from Power BI display the unique attributes and information about each bird and its status in the wild. The fun facts on the visualization about each bird will linger in your mind for days.
AI Web App:
In this webapp, I used cognitive services to upload the images (of the 85 bird species), tagged them, trained the model, and evaluated the results. With Microsoft Custom Vision AI, I could
train the model to recognize 85 bird species. You can upload an image from your file explorer, and it will then predict the species name of the bird and the accuracy tied to that tag.
The Custom Vision Service uses machine learning to classify the images I uploaded. The only thing I was required to do was specify the correct tag for each image. You can also tag thousands of images at a time. The AI algorithm is very powerful as it gives us great accuracy's and once the model is trained, we can use the same model to classify new images according to the needs of our app.
For a live demo, go to aiforbirds.com and then click on Start Now. There are two ways (in the web app) to recognize the bird species
1. Choose a bird image from your PC
2. Upload a bird image URL
3. Take a picture of a bird in real-time (only works on the phone app as described later in the blog)
Once you upload an image, it will call the Custom Vision Prediction API (which was already trained by Custom Vision, powered by Microsoft) to get species of the bird.
Phone Application:
I also created a phone application that you can use with camera integration for taking pictures of birds in real-time. After using the built-in camera to take a picture, the name of the bird species will be identified and shown. As of now, I added 85 bird species into the AI model, however that number will increase.
The journey of building my own custom model, training it, and deploying it has been noteworthy. Here is the link to my other blog for how to build your own AI custom model. You can also follow along with these steps and use it as a tutorial: Instructions for how to create Power BI reports and publish to web will also be provided in the other blog.
Conclusion:
The grim statistics are not just bad news for bird populations. They are bad news for the planet as a whole because the health of bird species is a key- measure for the state of ecosystems and biodiversity on planet earth in general.
I believe in: Exploring- Learning- Teaching- Sharing. There are several thousands of other bird species that are critical to biodiversity on planet earth.
Consider looking at my app and supporting organizations that work to fight the constant threats of habitat destruction and global warming today.
Our Earth is full of unique birds which took millions of years to evolve into the striking bird species we see today. We do not want to destroy organisms which took millions of years to evolve in just a couple of decades.
Sources:
This is a companion discussion topic for the original entry at https://blog.datasciencedojo.com/p/19d02dda-9080-4cfe-be6d-517a79e8408f/