| Literature DB >> 29738501 |
Jacob Kamminga1, Eyuel Ayele2, Nirvana Meratnia3, Paul Havinga4.
Abstract
Between 1960 and 1990, 95% of the black rhino population in the world was killed. In South Africa, a rhino was killed every 8 h for its horn throughout 2016. Wild animals, rhinos and elephants, in particular, are facing an ever increasing poaching crisis. In this paper, we review poaching detection technologies that aim to save endangered species from extinction. We present requirements for effective poacher detection and identify research challenges through the survey. We describe poaching detection technologies in four domains: perimeter based, ground based, aerial based, and animal tagging based technologies. Moreover, we discuss the different types of sensor technologies that are used in intruder detection systems such as: radar, magnetic, acoustic, optic, infrared and thermal, radio frequency, motion, seismic, chemical, and animal sentinels. The ultimate long-term solution for the poaching crisis is to remove the drivers of demand by educating people in demanding countries and raising awareness of the poaching crisis. Until prevention of poaching takes effect, there will be a continuous urgent need for new (combined) approaches that take up the research challenges and provide better protection against poaching in wildlife areas.Entities:
Keywords: anti-poaching; conservation; intruder detetection; surveillance
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29738501 PMCID: PMC5982520 DOI: 10.3390/s18051474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1White Rhinoceros and African Elephants in their natural habitats.
Figure 2Number of poached rhinos in South Africa, adopted from the data published by the South African Department of Environmental Affairs (2017) [2].
Figure 3Anti-poaching methodology.
Summary of requirements.
| Techniques | Details |
|---|---|
| Energy Efficiency | Energy saving capability of an anti-poaching technology is still an open issue |
| Deployment issues | Running power consumption, stealthiness to the environment, maintainability and its easy of deployment are categorized into deployment issues |
| Robustness | An Anti-Poaching System (APS) should be robust to at least common technical faults |
| Scalability | The capability of an APS to seamless integrate additional number of devices with the system |
| Coverage | The ability of an APS to provide full surveillance coverage of a certain protective region |
| Ethical and legal | The ability of an APS to deal with moral principles and to be abide by the regulations and laws, especially wildlife conservation laws |
Comparison between sensor technologies.
| Sensor Technology | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radar | Longer range; does not require direct line of sight; estimate velocity of target; tracking of target | No stealth due to active nature; sensitive to interference, such as precipitation and foliage; intruders can reduce radar signature; expensive | [ |
| Magnetic | Detection of metal objects such as cars or weapons | Very short range | [ |
| Acoustic | Long range; economical | Different acoustic characteristics found in different environments; large vocal repertoire | [ |
| Ultrasonic | Long range; economical | Ultrasonic sound is easily absorbed by clothing and foliage | [ |
| Optical | Long range; identification of targets | Require line of sight; expensive | [ |
| Infrared and Thermal | Possibility to detect target at night | Difficult to detect target in hot environments | [ |
| Radio Frequency | Does not require line of sight; high level of stealth | Require (buried) cables along perimeter; limited volumetric range | [ |
| Motion | Possibility to classify intrusion type on fences or structures; economical | Range limited to physical structure that sensors are attached to | [ |
| Seismic | High level of stealth | Range and quality of seismic measurements is different for each environment (soil type) | [ |
| Chemical | Can be used to mark targets for identification; tracking of poached items | Does not prevent animals from being killed; can be obtrusive to animals | [ |
| Animal Sentinels | In theory very large volumetric range; high sensitivity | Many sensors needed; deployment difficulties such as power usage and collaring | [ |
Overview of poaching detection technologies.
| Technique | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Fences are often already in place (sometimes electrified) and can be fortified with the surveyed approaches; some of the surveyed approaches are commercially available | Detect intrusion only along the perimeter of an area, not inside the area itself (linear detection zone). Poachers can enter through the main gate, e.g., disguised as tourist operators. | |
| Lasers combined with movement detection PIR sensors | Lasers can cover larger distances | No classification; triggered by plants and animals; large False Alarm Rate (FAR) | [ |
| Sensor nodes with accelerometers attached to a fence | Classification of intrusion event, thus lower FAR | Many sensors needed; low stealth | [ |
| Microphonic cables attached to fence | Classification and localization of intrusion | 200 m segments; a lot of infrastructure needed; low stealth | [ |
| Optical fiber attached to fence | Classification and localization of intrusion; segments up to 1000 m; no power needed along segments; insensitive to electromagnetic inference; very sensitive; reliable | Expensive; low stealth. | [ |
| Buried optical fiber to detect footsteps | High stealth; harder to destroy; segment ranges up to 10 km | Difficult to bury cables in wildlife areas; soil types vary; expensive | [ |
| Networked sensors of various types (infrared, magnetic, camera) on and around a fence | Higher resilience; some works include distributed algorithms that aim to decrease FAR | Many sensors needed; large overhead | [ |
|
| Can detect intruders on larger area; not limited to linear zone. | Any infrastructure placed inside a wildlife area is prone to be damaged by wildlife. | |
| Buried coaxial cable | High stealth. Field is wider than optical fiber approach. Commercially available. | Difficult to bury cables in wildlife areas; soil types vary; expensive; volumetric range is not very high. | [ |
| Fixed sensor node placement with various sensors (RADAR, microphone, light intensity, magnetometers) | Improved animal tracking | Many sensors needed; deployment difficulties such as power usage and destruction of nodes | [ |
| Recording animal sounds | Some animals can be heard 4 km away; thus larger range | More challenging approach because: necessary to understand animal sounds; different acoustic characteristics are found in different environments; difference in the vocal repertoire between different species | [ |
| Gunshot detection | Gunshots can be heard from far away; thus larger range | High chance of animal being killed before poacher detection | [ |
| Ultra Wide Band (UWB) WSN | Classification of intrusion event; thus lower FAR; higher stealth. Improved detection in forested areas. | Limited range; many sensors needed; deployment difficulties such as power usage and destruction of nodes | [ |
|
| Very agile and can cover large areas | Aerial based techniques are obtrusive to habitants and tourists; crashing drones can be a hazard to people and wildlife; can be vulnerable to shooting | |
| Drones with heat sensing and camera equipment | Works up to 180 m height, thus large range | Unable to detect people under foliage; high running costs | [ |
| Using predictive analytics for automated air surveillance | Improved surveillance accuracy; less sensors needed | Unable to detect people under foliage; high running costs | [ |
|
| Can potentially cover very large areas with high sensitivity | Many sensors needed; deployment difficulties such as power usage and collaring | |
| Attach various sensors (cameras, motion, GPS) to animals and classify anomalous behavior | Timely notification of anomalies | Difficult to classify anomalies | [ |
| Monitor physiological status of rhino and implement camera + GPS in rhino horn | Timely notification of animal distress or death; possibility to identify poachers through photos taken from the horn | Still high chance of animal being killed; location data of rhinos is very valuable and can motivate corruption | [ |
| Detect horn separation from body through RFID | Helps to notify rangers as soon as animal is poached and increases possibility of the poacher’s capture | Rhino will be killed; the RFID chips will grow out of the horn | [ |
PIR, passive infrared; FAR, false alarm rate; RADAR, radio detection and ranging; UWB, ultra wide band; GPS, global positioning system; RFID, radio-frequency identification.
Figure 4The camera component implanted in the front lobe of the rhino’s horn [34].
Figure 5A snapshot of dyeing and removal of the rhino’s horn in an attempt to stop poaching. The horn is poisoned with chemical to make the horn useless to consume [98].