Density estimation of the main structuring sessile species in underwater marine caves with a deep learning approach
Ver/ Abrir
Registro completo
Mostrar el registro completo DCAutoría
Sierra Menéndez, Sergio



Fecha
2023Derechos
© 2023 by author(s). Journal of Geography and Cartography is published by EnPress Publisher LL
Publicado en
Journal of Geography and Cartography, 2023, 6(1), 1980
Editorial
EnPress
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Marine Biodiversity
Underwater Caves
Underwater Images
Deep Learning
Semantic Segmentation
Resumen/Abstract
Monitoring marine biodiversity is a challenge in some vulnerable and difficult-to-access habitats, such as underwater caves. Underwater caves are a great focus of biodiversity, concentrating a large number of species in their environment. However, most of the sessile species that live on the rocky walls are very vulnerable, and they are often threatened by different pressures. The use of these spaces as a destination for recreational divers can cause different impacts on the benthic habitat. In this work, we propose a methodology based on video recordings of cave walls and image analysis with deep learning algorithms to estimate the spatial density of structuring species in a study area. We propose a combination of automatic frame overlap detection, estimation of the actual extent of surface cover, and semantic segmentation of the main 10 species of corals and sponges to obtain species density maps. These maps can be the data source for monitoring biodiversity over time. In this paper, we analyzed the performance of three different semantic segmentation algorithms and backbones for this task and found that the Mask R-CNN model with the Xception101 backbone achieves the best accuracy, with an average segmentation accuracy of 82%.
Colecciones a las que pertenece
- D50 Artículos [312]
- D50 Proyectos de Investigación [404]
- IDIVAL Artículos [864]
- IDIVAL Proyectos de investigación [191]