Deep learning with citizen science data enables estimation of species diversity and composition at continental extents.

Journal: Ecology
PMID:

Abstract

Effective solutions to conserve biodiversity require accurate community- and species-level information at relevant, actionable scales and across entire species' distributions. However, data and methodological constraints have limited our ability to provide such information in robust ways. Herein we employ a Deep-Reasoning Network implementation of the Deep Multivariate Probit Model (DMVP-DRNets), an end-to-end deep neural network framework, to exploit large observational and environmental data sets together and estimate landscape-scale species diversity and composition at continental extents. We present results from a novel year-round analysis of North American avifauna using data from over nine million eBird checklists and 72 environmental covariates. We highlight the utility of our information by identifying critical areas of high species diversity for a single group of conservation concern, the North American wood warblers, while capturing spatiotemporal variation in species' environmental associations and interspecific interactions. In so doing, we demonstrate the type of accurate, high-resolution information on biodiversity that deep learning approaches such as DMVP-DRNets can provide and that is needed to inform ecological research and conservation decision-making at multiple scales.

Authors

  • Courtney L Davis
    Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
  • Yiwei Bai
    Department of Computer Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
  • Di Chen
    Department of Gastroenterology, Hainan General Hospital, Hainan Affiliated Hospital of Hainan Medical University, Haikou, China. Electronic address: 2389446889@qq.com.
  • Orin Robinson
    Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
  • Viviana Ruiz-Gutierrez
    Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
  • Carla P Gomes
    Department of Computer Science, Cornell University , Ithaca, New York 14850, United States.
  • Daniel Fink
    Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.