Google released a new AI tool this week,xxx tv show designed to identify animal species to help with wildlife monitoring.

On Monday, the tech giant announced the release of SpeciesNet, an open source model for wildlife biologists. SpeciesNet consists of a model for identifying objects in footage from cameras that monitor wildlife and a second model for classifying those objects into animal species.

Since 2019, wildlife biologists have had access to SpeciesNet though a Google Cloud-based tool called Wildlife Insights. On Monday, SpeciesNet was released to the public as an open source model.

Mashable Light Speed Want more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories? Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter. By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Thanks for signing up!

You May Also Like

Scientists use motion activated cameras to study wildlife in their habitats. But processing the camera footage is time-consuming because it involves sifting through massive amounts of images. "AI can accelerate that processing, helping conservation practitioners spend more time on conservation, and less time reviewing images," read the SpeciesNet repository hosted on GitHub.

Google says SpeciesNet was trained on a dataset of over 65 million images including camera trap images from Wildlife Insights users and publicly available datasets. SpeciesNet combines data gathered from its underlying models to make a prediction about each animal it identifies and labels the accuracy percentage.


Related Stories
  • Intel's 20-year-old AI ethics prodigy on the future of artificial intelligence
  • It's now easier to remove personal information from Google Search results
  • How Grok 3 compares to ChatGPT, DeepSeek and other AI rivals
  • OpenAI strips warnings from ChatGPT, but its content policy hasn't changed
  • OpenAI's GPT-4.5 is here. How to try it now.
night vision image of a giant armadillo taken by a camera trap and identified by google speciesnetSpeciesNet is 93% sure it's an animal, but we're 100% sure it's a prehistoric tank. Credit: Google / University of Minnesota

According to Google, SpeciesNet can "classify images into one of more than 2000 labels, covering diverse animal species, higher-level taxa (like 'mammalia' or 'felidae'), and non-animal classes ('blank', 'vehicle')."

SpeciesNet is available as an open source model on GitHub.

Topics Artificial Intelligence Google

Author

Editorial Team

Our editorial team is dedicated to delivering accurate, timely, and engaging content. With expertise across various domains, we strive to inform and inspire our readers.