CVAIFeb 25, 2025

From underwater to aerial: a novel multi-scale knowledge distillation approach for coral reef monitoring

arXiv:2502.17883v1h-index: 4
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for scalable and accurate reef assessments for conservation efforts, representing an incremental improvement by combining existing imaging technologies with AI.

This study tackled the problem of monitoring coral reefs by integrating fine-scale underwater imagery with medium-scale aerial imagery using a multi-scale knowledge distillation approach, achieving an AUC score of 0.9251 for predicting coral morphotypes and habitats.

Drone-based remote sensing combined with AI-driven methodologies has shown great potential for accurate mapping and monitoring of coral reef ecosystems. This study presents a novel multi-scale approach to coral reef monitoring, integrating fine-scale underwater imagery with medium-scale aerial imagery. Underwater images are captured using an Autonomous Surface Vehicle (ASV), while aerial images are acquired with an aerial drone. A transformer-based deep-learning model is trained on underwater images to detect the presence of 31 classes covering various coral morphotypes, associated fauna, and habitats. These predictions serve as annotations for training a second model applied to aerial images. The transfer of information across scales is achieved through a weighted footprint method that accounts for partial overlaps between underwater image footprints and aerial image tiles. The results show that the multi-scale methodology successfully extends fine-scale classification to larger reef areas, achieving a high degree of accuracy in predicting coral morphotypes and associated habitats. The method showed a strong alignment between underwater-derived annotations and ground truth data, reflected by an AUC (Area Under the Curve) score of 0.9251. This shows that the integration of underwater and aerial imagery, supported by deep-learning models, can facilitate scalable and accurate reef assessments. This study demonstrates the potential of combining multi-scale imaging and AI to facilitate the monitoring and conservation of coral reefs. Our approach leverages the strengths of underwater and aerial imagery, ensuring the precision of fine-scale analysis while extending it to cover a broader reef area.

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