Forensic Intelligence and Remote Sensing Technologies for nature conservation

Food, Bioeconomy & Natural ResourcesHORIZON-RIAID: 101060954
EC Contribution
€45,383
Consortium Size
12 orgs
Start Year
2022
β–ΆSummary

Biodiversity is under severe pressure due to a myriad of problems, including but not limited to habitat fragmentation, overexploitation, climate change, pollution, invasive species and hunting. Changes in land and sea use can lead to conflict situations with production animals and/or human communities (human-wildlife conflict). The exploitation of natural resources brings with it illegal activities: poaching of species of flora and fauna that have a high value on the (black) market, trading of rare and exotic animals and plants and setting fire to forestry and nature areas to force land-use designation changes to agriculture or commercial uses. To ensure that ecosystems are healthy, resilient to climate change and rich in biodiversity to keep delivering the essential range of services, we need better understanding of why and where biodiversity is declining and what the key triggers are. We propose a model-driven and continuous form of ecosystem monitoring. By assessing not only numbers of species and state, but also the modelled ecological and anthropogenic processes within an ecosystem, we are able to find cause-effect relations and improve our monitoring models based on retrofits and simulations to understand changes even better. The models (Digital Twins), are thus a means for learning and the creation of context to translate environmental observations into facts and actionable information (intelligence) for site managers and policy makers. As almost all pressures on biodiversity are man-induced, we combine the domains of ecology and forensic science. This novel approach gives us access to robust scientific methods to detect and recognise (traces of) human (illegal) activities that negatively affect the environment. We will make use of remote sensing & data science (e.g AI, semantics). To ensure that theory, models and practice reinforce each other, we use an iterative approach, including many demonstrations and field-tests to gain feedback and maximize impact.

Consortium (12)

Project Results (18)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

β–ΆPublications (7)
Automated near real-time monitoring in ecology: Status quo and ways forward
Ecological InformaticsΒ· 2025DOI
Anna Marie Davison, Koen de Koning, Franziska Taubert, Jan-Kees Schakel
The crane radar: Development and deployment of an operational eco-digital twin
Ecological InformaticsΒ· 2025DOI
K. De Koning
High-resolution spatiotemporal forecasting of the European crane migration
Ecological ModellingΒ· 2024DOI
K. De Koning, L. Nilsson, J. MΓ₯nsson, O. Ovaskainen, B. Kranstauber, M. Arp, J.K. Schakel
Structure and dynamics of conflicts with large carnivores in the Ukrainian Carpathians
TusnadEcoBear ConferenceΒ· 2024
Roman Cherepanyn, Taras Yamelynets
Nature FIRST: Forensic Intelligence and Remote Sensing Technologies for nature conservation
IAF 74th Congress proceedingsΒ· 2023
Tessa Buckley, Linda van Duivenbode, Cristian Papp, Jan Kees Schakel, Boris Hinojo
Towards preserving Biodiversity using Nature FIRST Knowledge Graph with Crossovers
International Semantic Web ConferenceΒ· 2023
Albin Ahmeti, Robert David, Artem Revenko, Jan-Kees Schakel
KCEO Stakeholder Workshop on Biodiversity and Earth Observation
Β· 2022
KCEO Secretariat
β–ΆDeliverables (10)
β–ΆOther Results (1)
Periodic Reporting for period 2 - NATURE-FIRST (Forensic Intelligence and Remote Sensing Technologies for nature conservation)