Opportunities and challenges for monitoring terrestrial biodiversity in the robotics age

Date published

2025-06

Free to read from

2025-06-25

Authors

Pringle, Stephen
Dallimer, Martin
Goddard, Mark A.
Le Goff, Léni K.
Hart, Emma
Langdale, Simon J.
Fisher, Jessica C.
Abad, Sara-Adela
Ancrenaz, Marc
Angeoletto, Fabio
Auat Cheein, Fernando
Austen, Gail E.
Bailey, Joseph J.
Baldock, Katherine C. R.
Banin, Lindsay F.
Banks-Leite, Cristina
Barau, Aliyu S.
Bashyal, Reshu
Bates, Adam J.
Bicknell, Jake E.
Bielby, Jon
Bosilj, Petra
Bush, Emma R.
Butler, Simon J.
Carpenter, Daniel
Clements, Christopher F.
Cully, Antoine
Davies, Kendi F.
Deere, Nicolas J.
Dodd, Michael
Drinkwater, Rosie
Driscoll, Don A.
Dutilleux, Guillaume
Dyrmann, Mads
Edwards, David P.
Farhadinia, Mohammad S.
Faruk, Aisyah
Field, Richard
Fletcher, Robert J.
Foster, Chris W.
Fox, Richard
Francksen, Richard M.
Franco, Aldina M. A.
Gainsbury, Alison M.
Gardner, Charlie J.
Giorgi, Ioanna
Griffiths, Richard A.
Hamaza, Salua
Hanheide, Marc
Hayward, Matt W.
Hedblom, Marcus
Helgason, Thorunn
Heon, Sui P.
Hughes, Kevin A.
Hunt, Edmund R.
Ingram, Daniel J.
Jackson-Mills, George
Jowett, Kelly
Keitt, Timothy H.
Kloepper, Laura N.
Kramer-Schadt, Stephanie
Labisko, Jim
Labrosse, Frédéric
Lawson, Jenna
Lecomte, Nicolas
de Lima, Ricardo F.
Littlewood, Nick A.
Marshall, Harry H.
Masala, Giovanni L.
Maskell, Lindsay C.
Matechou, Eleni
Mazzolai, Barbara
McConnell, Alistair
Melbourne, Brett A.
Miriyev, Aslan
Nana, Eric Djomo
Ossola, Alessandro
Papworth, Sarah
Parr, Catherine L.
Payo-Payo, Ana
Perry, Gad
Pettorelli, Nathalie
Pillay, Rajeev
Potts, Simon G.
Prendergast-Miller, Miranda T.
Qie, Lan
Rolley-Parnell, Persie
Rossiter, Stephen J.
Rowcliffe, Marcus
Rumble, Heather
Sadler, Jon P.
Sandom, Christopher J.
Sanyal, Asiem
Schrodt, Franziska
Sethi, Sarab S.
Shabrani, Adi
Siddall, Robert
Smith, Simón C.
Snep, Robbert P. H.
Soulsbury, Carl D.
Stanley, Margaret C.
Stephens, Philip A.
Stephenson, P. J.
Struebig, Matthew J.
Studley, Matthew
Svátek, Martin
Tang, Gilbert
Taylor, Nicholas K.
Umbers, Kate D. L.
Ward, Robert J.
White, Patrick J. C.
Whittingham, Mark J.
Wich, Serge
Williams, Christopher D.
Yakubu, Ibrahim B.
Yoh, Natalie
Zaidi, Syed A. R.
Zmarz, Anna
Zwerts, Joeri A.
Davies, Zoe G.

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Nature

Department

Course name

Type

Article

ISSN

2397-334X

Format

Citation

Pringle S, Dallimer M, Goddard MA, et al., (2025) Opportunities and challenges for monitoring terrestrial biodiversity in the robotics age. Nature Ecology & Evolution, Volume 9, Issue 6, June 2025, pp. 1031-1042

Abstract

With biodiversity loss escalating globally, a step change is needed in our capacity to accurately monitor species populations across ecosystems. Robotic and autonomous systems (RAS) offer technological solutions that may substantially advance terrestrial biodiversity monitoring, but this potential is yet to be considered systematically. We used a modified Delphi technique to synthesize knowledge from 98 biodiversity experts and 31 RAS experts, who identified the major methodological barriers that currently hinder monitoring, and explored the opportunities and challenges that RAS offer in overcoming these barriers. Biodiversity experts identified four barrier categories: site access, species and individual identification, data handling and storage, and power and network availability. Robotics experts highlighted technologies that could overcome these barriers and identified the developments needed to facilitate RAS-based autonomous biodiversity monitoring. Some existing RAS could be optimized relatively easily to survey species but would require development to be suitable for monitoring of more ‘difficult’ taxa and robust enough to work under uncontrolled conditions within ecosystems. Other nascent technologies (for instance, new sensors and biodegradable robots) need accelerated research. Overall, it was felt that RAS could lead to major progress in monitoring of terrestrial biodiversity by supplementing rather than supplanting existing methods. Transdisciplinarity needs to be fostered between biodiversity and RAS experts so that future ideas and technologies can be codeveloped effectively.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

4101 Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation, 41 Environmental Sciences, 15 Life on Land, 3103 Ecology, 3104 Evolutionary biology, 4104 Environmental management

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Funder/s

This work was funded by the EPSRC UK-RAS Network. D.J.I. is funded by a UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship (grant ref: MR/W006316/1), and Z.G.D. and J.C.F. were supported by Research England’s ‘Expanding Excellence in England’ fund.

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