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As It Happens

Scientists are using facial recognition software to track and protect seals

Scientists are taking a controversial technology associated with surveillance, and adapting it forconservation.

Biologist Krista Ingram says theyre transforming a controversial technology into a force for good

A close-up of a seal's face as it pops its head above the water.
A harbor seal looks around in Casco Bay off Portland, Maine. A research team at Colgate University has developed SealNet, a facial recognition database created by taking pictures of dozens of harbor seals' faces in Maine. (Robert F. Bukaty/The Associated Press)

Scientists are taking a controversial technology associated with surveillance, and adapting it forconservation.

It's called SealNet, and it's a facial recognition database that's used to track the movement of seals.

"It's sort of transforming this technology from the Big Brother concerns that we have in human facial recognition technology, to using it for good," biologist Krista Ingram told As It Happens host Nil Kksal. "There's no downside."

Ingram, a biologist at Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., is the team leader of SealNet. Thesoftware was developed in part by Ahmet Ay, a Colgate associate professor of biology and mathematics. It's based onPrimNet,facial recognition software used to identify primates.

In a recent testIngram, Ay and their colleagues found SealNet could accurately identify individual harbor seals between 90 and 97 per cent of the time. The findings were published in the journal Ecology and Evolution.

Snapping seals

If you think all seals look alike, you may want to check your human biases.

Ingram says each seal is unique and she should know. She and her colleagues have spent hours in Maine's Casco Bay snapping pictures of harbor seals for the database.

Ingramsays she's taken more than 8,000 photographs of the critters so far. They've uploaded 1,250 of them to SealNet.

"I'm getting really good at it," she said.

A woman in a bright blue jacket leans over the edge of a boat and peers through a camera with a long lens.
Krista Ingram, a biology professor at Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., snaps pictures of harbor seals. (Submitted by Krista Ingram)

She and her team photograph the animals while they're resting on rocks that jut out of the water at low tide. They snap the shots from a boat using long-range cameras, so as to abide by federal regulations to keep 50 metres away from marine mammals.

It's not without its challenges.

"The difficulty is that you can't manipulate them. So you have to wait until they're actually looking at you if you want a full-on front picture," Ingram said. "So one of the things we're working on is using some new drone technology to allow us to more easily manoeuvre around to get every face of every seal on that rock."

Tracking key to conservation

Tracking the movement of seals is key to conservation planning, Ingram said.

Traditionally, scientists follow the movement of seals and other marine mammals using satellite trackers. But facial recognition technology could provide faster, cheaper, more accurate data with a non-invasive technique.

"When we are thinking about conservation policy, we really need, at its essence, the fundamental sort of biological data on population sizes," Ingram said.

A screenshot from facial recognition software shows four rows of images and accompanying text. Under
SealNet maps the unique characteristics of each harbor seal's face. (Submitted by Krista Ingram)

That includes getting a sense of the seals' migratory patterns in other words, how often do they return to the same places?

"The one problem we have with seals is that observing individuals and what they're doing over the season you know, over the course of a summer or over years that takes a lot of time. And the methods that we've used over the past few decades are very expensive and time-consuming," Ingram said.

"We're sort of taking conservation biology into the 21st century by using this type of technology to speed up that process and to automate things so that we can get that type of data much more quickly."

Michelle Berger, an associate scientist at the Shaw Institute in Maine, who was not involved in the SealNet research, says it looks very promising.

"Once the system is perfected I can picture lots of interesting ecological applications for it," Berger told The Associated Press.

"If they could recognize seals, and recognize them from year to year, that would give us lots of information about movement, how much they move from site to site."

Improving and expanding

The next step, says Ingram, is to improve SealNet's accuracy. Once they get it where they want it to be, they plan to offer it up to others, free of cost.

"We really want this technology to be accessible to seal researchers around the globe who may or may not have as much, you know, computer science background," she said.

To do that, the Colgate researchers are also working with FruitPunch, a Dutch artificial intelligence company, to improve some aspects of SealNet to encourage wider use.

FruitPunch's head of partnerships and growthTjomme Dooper says the companyis getting a few dozen scientists around the world to work on a challenge to streamline SealNet's workflow.

A close-up of a seal's face.
Ingram hopes SealNet can be adapted for other species of seals, like the endangered Hawaiian monk seal. (Caleb Jones/The Associated Press)

Harbor seals are already a conservation success story in the U.S. They were widely hunted by fishers in the 19th and early 20th centuries, but their populationrebounded after theMarine Mammal Protection Act passed 50 years ago.

Other seals,however, aren't so lucky. Ingram hopes SealNet will eventually be used to track the Hawaiian monk seal andthe Mediterranean monk seal, both of which are endangered species.

"Using this technology for conservation and actually making it available and free of cost for people that work around the globe on conservation issues and marine coastal policies it's just it's a win-win," Ingram said.


With files from The Associated Press. Interview with Krista Ingram produced by Sarah Cooper and Devin Nguyen.

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