BatEchoMon, India’s first automated bat monitoring, detection system
For her PhD research, bat biologist Kadambari Deshpande made overnight recordings of bat echolocation calls in the Western Ghats. A “good night” would generate about 30 GB of data from 11 hours of recording with a bat detector. To process the data, Deshpande would go through several one-minute recordings, scanning every millisecond for bat calls, and make notes on the species and other information on their behaviour and ecology. “It took me 11 months to process 20 nights of data,” Deshpande said. “BatEchoMon can probably give me that in a few hours.” BatEchoMon, short for “Bat Echolocation Monitoring”, is an autonomous system capable of detecting and analysing bat calls in real-time. It is India’s first automated bat monitoring system, developed by Deshpande and Vedant Barje under the guidance of Jagdish Krishnaswamy, as part of the Long-Term Urban Ecological Observatory in the School of Environment and Sustainability at the Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS), Bengaluru. Deshpande is a postdoctoral fellow at the Observatory and the School; Barje, who leads the WildTech Project at the Wildlife …
