Award Abstract # 0326483
ITR: Advanced Imaging and Information Technology for Assessing the Ecological and Economic Impact of Brazilian Free-Tailed Bats on Agroecosystems

NSF Org: IIS
Division of Information & Intelligent Systems
Recipient: TRUSTEES OF BOSTON UNIVERSITY
Initial Amendment Date: September 16, 2003
Latest Amendment Date: July 31, 2007
Award Number: 0326483
Award Instrument: Continuing Grant
Program Manager: Sylvia Spengler
sspengle@nsf.gov
 (703)292-7347
IIS
 Division of Information & Intelligent Systems
CSE
 Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering
Start Date: September 15, 2003
End Date: August 31, 2009 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $2,400,000.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $2,496,305.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2003 = $1,440,000.00
FY 2004 = $43,905.00

FY 2005 = $360,000.00

FY 2006 = $388,000.00

FY 2007 = $264,400.00
History of Investigator:
  • Thomas Kunz (Principal Investigator)
    kunz@bu.edu
  • Gary McCracken (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Margrit Betke (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • John Westbrook (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Patricia Morton (Co-Principal Investigator)
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Trustees of Boston University
1 SILBER WAY
BOSTON
MA  US  02215-1703
(617)353-4365
Sponsor Congressional District: 07
Primary Place of Performance: Trustees of Boston University
1 SILBER WAY
BOSTON
MA  US  02215-1703
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
07
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): THL6A6JLE1S7
Parent UEI:
NSF Program(s): BE: NON-ANNOUNCEMENT RESEARCH,
ITR MEDIUM (GROUP) GRANTS,
Info Integration & Informatics,
Robust Intelligence
Primary Program Source: app-0103 
app-0104 

app-0105 

app-0106 

app-0107 
Program Reference Code(s): 1652, 1687, 9178, 9218, 9251, HPCC, SMET
Program Element Code(s): 162900, 168700, 736400, 749500
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.070

ABSTRACT



Intellectual Merit of the Proposed Activity
Millions of Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) voraciously consume enormous quantities of insects each summer night throughout the southwestern United States. These bats provide an agricultural pest control service little understood by the scientific community and policy makers. The proposed effort will evaluate the nationwide ecological and economic impact of this species on both natural and agricultural ecosystems. The project is innovative in its development of information technology and unique in its complexity and scale. It requires the collaborative efforts of computer scientists, applied mathematicians, meteorologists, ecologists, and ecological economists. Proposed activities involve:
1. Sensing Technologies.-Design, develop, deploy, and evaluate algorithms and systems for thermal, ultrasonic, and radar sensing of millions of bats and insect pests. Such algorithms and systems currently do not exist but are crucial for providing a reliable census of the nationwide free-tailed bat populations and processes. Computer vision techniques will be developed to analyze nightly emergence, flight paths, and foraging behaviors of individuals and groups of bats.
2. Computational Modeling.-Design, develop, solve, and validate computational models of the agricultural-insects-bats system across temporal and spatial scales. Processes at lower levels of organization, such as the individual bat and its physiological functions, will be analyzed to solve problems posed at higher ecological levels of organization from the population to the landscape. Local population models for particular caves or bridges will be generalized to a spatially explicit regional model for Texas, and then to a spatially explicit landscape model that describes the nationwide impact of Brazilian free-tailed bats on agricultural ecosystems. Currently, no complete individual or population life-history models exist for free-tailed bats nor, indeed, for any bat species, in spite of the fact bats are ubiquitous throughout the world and are distinguished as the second largest order of mammals.
3. System Integration.-The proposed models will be integrated using both conceptual and spatial hierarchies. Results provided by the sensing technologies will be combined to represent the processes of foraging and migration. The integration of these outcomes as well as molecular tools (such as fecal DNA), entomological and agricultural information, energetics, meteorological and toxicological databases, will provide input parameters and validation data to computational models of bat populations. The models will integrate the interdependencies of dietary factors, energy consumption and allocation, weather patterns, effects of toxicants, etc. on birth and mortality rates and population sizes of bats and their prey.

Broader Impacts Resulting from the Proposed Activity
The importance of natural pest-control services becomes evident often only when they are degraded or eliminated by human activity. The proposed research will provide realistic estimates of the economic impact of Brazilian free-tailed bats. The proposed techniques may generalize to other species and thus have a broad impact in the fields of biology, ecology, ecological economics, and agriculture. The proposed methods of image analysis may apply to other large-scale video tracking applications, for instance, the analysis of group behavior of other bat species, insects, herding mammals (e.g., seals, caribou), colonial seabirds, the analysis of human crowd behavior, data mining of video of human motion, and video surveillance for homeland security. An important impact of the proposed research on society will be the development appropriate policy responses by federal, state, or local authorities based on the fundamentally improved understanding of the underlying biological and economic principles of natural pest control. The proposed effort addresses the goals of the ITR Program in a number of ways. It is multidisciplinary in nature, providing a new bridge between the fields of computational sciences and ecology. This may lead to novel, unanticipated insights and technologies in both fields. The proposed effort will train students in biology and computer science to fully integrate information technology and science. Graduate and undergraduate students from both disciplines will learn to conduct joint field experiments, analyze data, and work with computational models. The projects in computer science that are inspired by questions in biology promise to have a special appeal to women, and we expect that our project will encourage more women to explore the computational aspects of biology.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

Note:  When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

(Showing: 1 - 10 of 33)
Ammerman, L.K., M. McDonough, N.I. Hristov, and T.H. Kunz. "Census of the endangered Mexican long-nosed bat (Leptonycteris nivalis) in Texas using thermal imaging." Endangered Species Research , 2009 10.3354/esr00169
Betke, M., D.E. Hirsh, A. Bagchi, N.I. Hristov, N.C. Makris, and T.H. Kunz. "Tracking large variable numbers of objects in clutter." Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), , 2007
Betke, M., D.E. Hirsh, A. Bagchi, N.I. Hristov, N.C. Makris, and T.H. Kunz. "Tracking large variable numbers of objects in clutter." Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), , 2007 , p.1
Betke, M., D.E. Hirsh, A. Bagchi, N.I. Hristov, N.C. Makris, and T.H. Kunz. "Tracking large variable numbers of objects in clutter." Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), , 2007 , p.1
Betke, M., D.E. Hirsh, N.C. Makris, G. F. McCracken, M. Procopio, N.I. Hristov, S. Tang, A. Bagchi, J. Reichard, J.W. Horn, S. Crampton, C.J. Cleveland, and T.H. Kunz. "Thermal imaging reveals significantly smaller Brazilian free-tailed bat colonies than previously estimated." Journal of Mammalogy , v.89 , 2008 , p.18
Cleveland, C.J., J.D. Frank, P. Federico, I. Gomez, T.G Hallam, J. Horn, T.H. Kunz, J. Lopez, G.F. McCracken, R.A. Medellin, A.Moreno-V, C. Sasone, and J.K. Westbrook. "Economic value of the pest control service provided by Brazilian free-tailed bat in south-central Texas." Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, , v.4 , 2006 , p.238
Federico, P., T. G. Hallam, G.F. McCracken, S. T. Purucker, W.E. Grant, A. Correa Sandoval, J. K. Westbrook, R.A. Medellín, C.J. Cleveland, C.G. Sansone, J.D. López Jr., M.Betke, A. Moreno-Valdez, T.H. Kunz. "Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) as insect predators in transgenic and conventional cotton crops" Ecological Applications , v.18 , 2008 , p.826
Federico, P., T. G. Hallam, G.F. McCracken, S. T. Purucker, W.E. Grant, A. Correa Sandoval, J. K. Westbrook, R.A. Medellín, C.J. Cleveland, C.G. Sansone, J.D. López Jr., M.Betke, A. Moreno-Valdez, T.H. Kunz. "Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) as insect predators in transgenic and conventional cotton crops" Ecological Applications , v.18 , 2008 , p.826
Gillam, E. H "Eavesdropping by bats on the feeding buzzes of conspecifics" Canadian Journal of Zoology , v.85 , 2007 , p.795
Gillam, E.H. "Eavesdropping by bats on the feeding buzzes of conspecifics." Journal of Zoology (London) , v.85 , 2007 , p.795
Gillam, E.H. and G.F. McCracken "Variability in the echolocation of Brazilian free-tailed bats, Tadarida brasiliensis: effects of geography and local acoustic environment." Animal Behaviour , v.74 , 2007 , p.277
(Showing: 1 - 10 of 33)

Please report errors in award information by writing to: awardsearch@nsf.gov.

Print this page

Back to Top of page