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- Analysis of Deep Learning Methods for Detection of Bird Species
Birds have always been important part of every surroundings and they are utmost important to the environment Taking this, it’s now clear that how important and is required it is to be able to identify birds among different animals Article suggests a way to identify birds with respect to their species We used an unsupervised learning algorithm using Deep Learning to network our model which
- Why cats meow at humans more than each other - The Conversation
An acoustic analysis revealed a high-pitch component in these solicitation purrs, resembling a cry This hidden cry taps into our innate sensitivity to distress sounds, making it nearly impossible
- National Audubon Society
The National Audubon Society protects birds and the places they need, today and tomorrow, throughout the Americas using science, advocacy, education, and on-the-ground conservation
- Urban Bird Feeders Dominated by a Few Species and Individuals
Most visitation events had only a single species present (57 3%), with two species present in 33 5% of visitation events Only 9 2% of visitation events had three or more species present Mean total abundance per visitation event was 4 9 ± 1 53 birds, with a mean species richness of 1 5 ± 0 01 species
- Genomes, fossils, and the concurrent rise of modern birds and . . .
The phylogenetic relationships among modern birds (crown Aves) have been intensively studied in the past decade (1–3) This research has corroborated the traditional basal division of modern birds into two monophyletic clades, Palaeognathae (flightless birds) and Neognathae (the majority of living birds), and the division of Neognathae into Galloanserae (landfowl and waterfowl) and all
- Bird species disappear much faster than previously thought . . .
There are roughly 11 000 species of birds in the world, and 187 avian species are known to have gone extinct during the past 500 years Probably the best-known example of an extinct bird species is the dodo that lived on Mauritius in the Indian ocean, until European seafarers discovered the island in the 16th century
- More than 10,000 pre-Columbian earthworks are still hidden . . .
We analyzed the relationship between the response (occurrence and abundance) of 79 domesticated tree species identified across 1676 forest plots and the predicted probability of earthwork presence using generalized linear models to test whether forests with a higher probability of earthwork presence have a higher frequency and abundance of
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