AI reveals that the Sahara actually has 1.8 billion trees and shrubs

AI analysis of satellite images sees trees and shrubs where human eyes can't.

Satellite imagery of the Sahara desert presents an arid expanse, the endless rolling dunes we know from movies. The thing is, normal satellite images don’t show individual trees, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re not there.

Researchers from the University of Copenhagen and NASA taught artificial intelligence about trees and had them take another look. It turns out there is lots of vegetation in the Western Sahara: an estimated 1.8 billion trees and shrubs.

“We were very surprised to see that quite a few trees actually grow in the Sahara Desert, because up until now, most people thought that virtually none existed,” says lead author Martin Brandt of the university’s Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management. “We counted hundreds of millions of trees in the desert alone. Doing so wouldn’t have been possible without this technology.”

The research is published in the journal Nature.

Why this matters: As important as trees are in fighting climate change, scientists need to know what trees there are, and where, and the study’s finding represents a significant addition to the global tree inventory.

The vegetation Brandt and his colleagues have identified is in the Western Sahara, a region of about 1.3 million square kilometers that includes the desert, the Sahel, and the sub-humid zones of West Africa.

“We counted hundreds of millions of trees in the desert alone. Doing so wouldn’t have been possible without this technology.”

 Martin Brandt, University of Copenhagen

These trees and shrubs have been left out of previous tabulations of carbon-processing worldwide forests. Says Brandt, “Trees outside of forested areas are usually not included in climate models, and we know very little about their carbon stocks. They are basically a white spot on maps and an unknown component in the global carbon cycle.”

In addition to being valuable climate-change information, the research can help facilitate strategic development of the region in which the vegetation grows due to a greater understanding of local ecosystems.

Credit: Martin Brandt, University of Copenhagen

The study: There’s been an assumption that there’s hardly enough vegetation outside of forested areas to be worth counting in areas such as this one. As a result the study represents the first time a significant number of trees — likely in the hundreds of millions when shrubs are subtracted from the overall figure — have been catalogued in the drylands region.

“Trees outside of forested areas are usually not included in climate models, and we know very little about their carbon stocks.”

Martin brandt

Members of the university’s Department of Computer Science trained a machine-learning module to recognize trees by feeding it thousands of pictures of them. This training left the AI be capable of spotting trees in the tiny details of satellite images supplied by NASA. The task took the AI just hours — it would take a human years to perform an equivalent analysis.

“This technology has enormous potential when it comes to documenting changes on a global scale and ultimately, in contributing towards global climate goals,” says co-author Christian Igel. “It is a motivation for us to develop this type of beneficial artificial intelligence.”

“Indeed,” says Brandt says, “I think it marks the beginning of a new scientific era.”

Onward: The researchers hope to further refine their AI to provide a more detailed accounting of the trees it identifies in satellite photos.

The study’s senior author, Rasmus Fensholt, says, “we are also interested in using satellites to determine tree species, as tree types are significant in relation to their value to local populations who use wood resources as part of their livelihoods. Trees and their fruit are consumed by both livestock and humans, and when preserved in the fields, trees have a positive effect on crop yields because they improve the balance of water and nutrients.”

Ahead is an expansion of the team’s tree hunt to a larger area of Africa, with the long-term goal being the creation of a more comprehensive and accurate global database of trees that grow beyond the boundaries of forests.

This article was originally published on our sister site, Big Think. Read the original article.

Related
The West needs more water. This Nobel winner may have the answer.
Paul Migrom has an Emmy, a Nobel, and a successful company. There’s one more big problem on the to-do list.
Can we automate science? Sam Rodriques is already doing it.
People need to anticipate the revolution that’s coming in how humans and AI will collaborate to create discoveries, argues Sam Rodrigues.
AI is now designing chips for AI
AI-designed microchips have more power, lower cost, and are changing the tech landscape.
Why futurist Amy Webb sees a “technology supercycle” headed our way
Amy Webb’s data suggests we are on the cusp of a new tech revolution that will reshape the world in much the same way the steam engine and internet did in the past.
Charting the evolution of nuclear energy
Nuclear fission’s stalled growth might give way to fusion’s clean energy potential
Up Next
Exit mobile version