Anirudh Potlapally

h-index8
2papers

2 Papers

CVSep 23, 2025
SmartWilds: Multimodal Wildlife Monitoring Dataset

Jenna Kline, Anirudh Potlapally, Bharath Pillai et al.

We present the first release of SmartWilds, a multimodal wildlife monitoring dataset. SmartWilds is a synchronized collection of drone imagery, camera trap photographs and videos, and bioacoustic recordings collected during summer 2025 at The Wilds safari park in Ohio. This dataset supports multimodal AI research for comprehensive environmental monitoring, addressing critical needs in endangered species research, conservation ecology, and habitat management. Our pilot deployment captured four days of synchronized monitoring across three modalities in a 220-acre pasture containing Pere David's deer, Sichuan takin, Przewalski's horses, as well as species native to Ohio. We provide a comparative analysis of sensor modality performance, demonstrating complementary strengths for landuse patterns, species detection, behavioral analysis, and habitat monitoring. This work establishes reproducible protocols for multimodal wildlife monitoring while contributing open datasets to advance conservation computer vision research. Future releases will include synchronized GPS tracking data from tagged individuals, citizen science data, and expanded temporal coverage across multiple seasons.

CVMar 8
Tracking Phenological Status and Ecological Interactions in a Hawaiian Cloud Forest Understory using Low-Cost Camera Traps and Visual Foundation Models

Luke Meyers, Anirudh Potlapally, Yuyan Chen et al.

Plant phenology, the study of cyclical events such as leafing out, flowering, or fruiting, has wide ecological impacts but is broadly understudied, especially in the tropics. Image analysis has greatly enhanced remote phenological monitoring, yet capturing phenology at the individual level remains challenging. In this project, we deployed low-cost, animal-triggered camera traps at the Pu'u Maka'ala Natural Area Reserve in Hawaii to simultaneously document shifts in plant phenology and flora-faunal interactions. Using a combination of foundation vision models and traditional computer vision methods, we measure phenological trends from images comparable to on-the-ground observations without relying on supervised learning techniques. These temporally fine-grained phenology measurements from camera-trap images uncover trends that coarser traditional sampling fails to detect. When combined with detailed visitation data detected from images, these trends can begin to elucidate drivers of both plant phenology and animal ecology.