Press Release: Thermal
imaging cameras can bolster
anti-poaching initiatives
September 2014
Poaching has become a serious problem in South Africa, with rhino poaching
reaching crisis levels. Year on year increases in the number of rhinos killed for their
horns, which are purported to have medicinal properties, are pushing these
animals closer to extinction, despite increased anti-poaching activities. These
initiatives are faced with a number of challenges, including limited resources as
well as the vast areas of open land that need to be monitored. Technology provides
the ultimate solution in the form of thermal imaging cameras with analytics
capabilities. These will enable conservation ventures and national parks to
effectively monitor park perimeters as well as open grasslands for suspicious
activities, helping to catch poachers before they can cause more harm.
South Africa is home to an estimated 90% of the world’s population of white
rhinos, and around 40% of the global population of black rhinos. Both of these
species have been placed on the International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN) Red List, with black rhinos listed as critically endangered and white rhinos
classified as near threatened. Statistics around the number of rhinos being
poached are concerning, with 668 rhinos killed in 2011, 1004 killed in 2013 and
numbers for 2014 at 695 as of 17 August. In spite of increased awareness of
poaching and efforts to curb these activities, poachers remain a major threat.
Anti-poaching initiatives aim to monitor conservation sites and national parks and
deploy anti-poaching personnel to deal with intruders. However, a lack of
resources combined with the sheer size of the area to be monitored makes this an
almost impossible task. To put this into perspective, the Kruger National Park
stretches 19 485 square kilometres – almost eight times the size of the Cape Town
metro and nearly 12 times the size of Johannesburg city – and this is only one of
South Africa’s national parks.
The increase in the number of rhinos being poached clearly shows that traditional
anti-poaching measures are no longer effective; they only put under-armed and
inadequately trained rangers at risk. The only hope to save the rhino from
extinction is for anti-poaching personnel to apprehend the poachers before they
strike. The aim is to monitor conservation sites and national parks in order to
prevent poachers entering the land, effectively stopping them in their tracks.
However, in the thick brush of South Africa’s game reserves, adequate surveillance
on the ground is very difficult, unless the correct technology is used.
To combat the militia tactics and equipment of the poachers, military specification
CCTV thermal imaging system with analytics provide the solution. Thermal cameras
offer the benefit of showing heat signatures rather than a traditional picture, which
means that day or night, whatever the weather, the image recorded will be the
same. When combined with an advanced monitoring application, this technology
enables anti-poaching protection services to be one step ahead in the fight to
protect these endangered species.
Thermal cameras with analytics enable users to create parameters that signal an
alert for specific criteria. This negates the need to have a person constantly
monitoring each video feed, which is a process that is prone to human error and is
not particularly accurate or effective. For example, specific images can trigger an
alert, as the analytics can differentiate between people and different animals, over
long distances, both during the day and at night. This is highly effective for
perimeter monitoring, to prevent poachers from even getting in to protected areas.
The range of the cameras varied from 50m up to one kilometre, depending on the
density of brush cover as well as deviations from straight line of sight. Perimeters
can be effectively monitored by overlapping cameras, ensuring there are no gaps
in the camera coverage. To enable the monitoring of open landscapes, cameras
can be mounted in clusters, facing in every direction on a six-metre pole, with a
complete solution including solar panel, battery and a GSM modem that enables
video to be broadcast back to central control. By linking the analytics to this
solution, alerts can be triggered if any suspicious activity is sighted, to ensure that
poachers are apprehended even if they slip past the perimeter.
Effective monitoring is key in the fight against rhino poaching. Using thermal
imaging cameras with advanced detection capability can offer a far more proactive
solution to stopping poachers in their tracks. Technology not only helps to protect
the lives of the rangers, it can also mean the difference between pre-empting the
death of a rhino, or hunting for the killers after the fact, when it is already too late.
Editorial contacts:
Graphic Image Technologies
Laurence Smith
Executive
Tel: 011 483 0333
Email: Laurence@git.co.za
Evolution PR
Lesley Rencontre
Tel: 011 462 0679
Email: lesley@evolutionpr.co.za
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