BatSpot: a retrainable neural network for automatic detection and classification of bat echolocation and detection of buzzes and social calls

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BatSpot: a retrainable neural network for automatic detection and classification of bat echolocation and detection of buzzes and social calls

Authors

Smeele, S. Q.; Hauer, C.; Bergler, C.; Dechmann, D. K. N.; Dietzer, M. T.; Elmeros, M.; Fjederholt, E. T.; Fogato, A.; Kohles, J. E.; Noeth, E.; Brinkloev, S. M. M.

Abstract

1. Bats are a diverse taxonomic group that display a wide range of interesting behaviours. Many bats are keystone species for their ecosystem, are IUCN Red-listed as vulnerable to critically endangered, and subject to human-wildlife conflicts arising from anthropogenic expansion. Yet bats remain understudied both with respect to behaviour, population ecology and conservation status. One of the major challenges when studying bats is obtaining data. Their nocturnal lifestyle and use of ultrasonic echolocation makes them difficult to track and record using traditional methods. Recent advances in passive acoustic monitoring have allowed researchers to record large amounts of data, but the detection and classification of vocalisations remain a challenge. Most available tools are either for profit or are limited to a narrow geographic range, and mostly focus on echolocation search phase calls. 2. Here we present BatSpot, a convolutional neural network trained to detect search phase calls, buzzes and social calls. It also offers the option to classify the search phase calls to species(-complex) level. We provide a GUI that allows researchers to retrain or transfer-train the models for their specific needs and validate the performance. 3. We test the performance of all models and show that they perform better than both commercial and open-source solutions (search phase file level F1: 0.97 vs 0.96, buzz detector F1: 0.95 vs 0.11). We furthermore show that retraining the search phase call detector for a new country with examples from just 59 recordings massively improves the performance (F1: 0.48 to 0.79). 4. BatSpot will enable bat researchers globally to automate detection and classification with minimal effort and includes novel options for social call and buzz detection, typically not featured in other automated tools for bat monitoring.

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