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RESEARCH
Science
Biology
COMPUTERS
AND THE NATURAL WORLD
Joint research project
to improve butterfly identification system
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
(217) 333-2177; a-lynn@uiuc.edu
6/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. That environmental scientists are working to
find better ways to identify butterfly species in the wild is perfectly
reasonable. That library scientists are collaborating in such natural-world
endeavors seems highly unlikely. However, one such collaborative project
is well under way at the University of Illinois.
For one part of his two-year research program funded by the National
Science Foundation, P. Bryan Heidorn, a UI professor of library and
information science, has set up an innovative project that, with the
help of doctoral students from both fields and some specialized
new software will greatly improve the standard system of identifying
the fancy fluttering 'flies.
Heidorn's idea was to create computer software that used graphics and
"similarity measures" to help citizen volunteers and experts
with species identification. Identification of lepidopterans is notoriously
difficult because they are so mobile and because capturing them in the
wild for later identification violates good conservation. Volunteers
have had to quickly determine and
remember many traits about size, color, wing patterning, flight
and feeding habits. Bringing computer principles to the task should
not only make identification easier, but also improve accuracy, Heidorn
said.
What happens, more specifically in Heidorn's program, called BIBE, or
Biological Information Browsing Environments, is that "interactive-key
software converts butterfly information into a format that is accessible
on the World Wide Web. Volunteers input the information they obtain
in any order and then through the process of elimination, identify the
correct butterfly species," he said, noting that diagnostic traits
and photographs appear online for verification.
Mary Lokhaiser, a doctoral student in the UI department of natural resources
and environmental sciences, built the interactive butterfly identification
key. Using a standard field guide to butterflies in Illinois, she put
all of the species' characteristics and photos into a database. Lokhaiser
reports that there are 96 species of butterflies in Illinois, their
wingspans range from 0.6 to 6 inches, they feed on everything from alfalfa
to animal feces, live in a wide variety of habitats, and some are "migrants
and vagrants."
Along the same lines, Bharat Mehra and three other students used GIS
- Geographic Information Systems - to interactively map forest and natural
vegetation. All of the team's work is being plugged into an ongoing
Illlinois Ecowatch program that uses citizen spotters to track the flora
and fauna of Illinois - in this case, to monitor the comings and going,
numbers and species of plants and animals in the state.
Heidorn has done the same work for a more stable feature of the environment
the trees of Illinois; that BIBE collection will be on the Web
early this summer. Later this summer, his group will test the butterfly
software with PrairieWatch volunteers. The BIBE site at http://www.biobrowser.org
is viewable on non-Macintosh computers.
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