Software that looks at animal footprints

Software is everywhere. Our lives are run by software these days, from the very moment we get woken up by the alarm on our mobile to the time we go to sleep listening to music playing on some software. So it’s hard to surprise we with yet another new take on the uses of software, but a recent read about a new way of tracking animals caught me off guard.

Called footprint-identification system (FIT) these systems analyze the picture of an animal’s footprint to find identifying marks, uses a global database of such marks to pinpoint animals, their age, sex and other properties.

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The idea came from working with local trackers in Zimbabwe. These footprint reading experts can look at footprint on the mud and actually identify an individual animal. This led Sky Alibhai, co-founder of WildTrack to come up with a software solution that utilizes the strategies of the indigenous trackers by leveraging the AI and data crunching abilities of a software system. The working system WildTrack is now operational and is being used by scientists to track Rhinos and keep them safe from poachers who kill them (did you know that as recent as 1960 there were more than 100,000 black rhinos and yet by 1995 that got to less than 2,500?).

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To use the system, scientists gather rhino footprint images with their smartphones and then use an app on the phone to upload the pictures to the serverside system. The FIT software on the serverside then processes that picture, compares it against it’s large database of pictures to identify the individual animal and store it’s current location and other geographic data that comes from the smartphone app.

What an amazing innovation, check it out at: How the FIT works