How Artificial Intelligence is being used to save whales
Smartphones, like many consumer products, arrive in the US on giant container ships, vessels that are leading killers of endangered whales that play crucial roles in the climate and ocean health. Now a high-tech initiative called Whale Safe is detecting the huge marine mammals off the coast of San Francisco and alerting ship captains to slow down to avoid deadly collisions. Launched on Wednesday, Whale Safe aims to create "school zones" for imperiled blue whales, fin whales and humpback whales in busy shipping lanes, according to the project's managers at the Benioff Ocean Science Laboratory at the University of California at Santa Barbara and at the Bay Area's Marine Mammal Center. Speeders are caught by satellite surveillance and cited online. That gives consumers the opportunity to see, for instance, if that cruise they're contemplating is operated by a company with a history of ignoring sea speed limits.
Sep-24-2022, 04:55:27 GMT
- Country:
- Europe > France (0.05)
- North America > United States
- California
- Los Angeles County > Los Angeles (0.05)
- San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.28)
- Santa Barbara Channel (0.09)
- California
- Pacific Ocean > North Pacific Ocean
- San Francisco Bay (0.05)
- Santa Barbara Channel (0.09)
- Industry:
- Technology:
- Information Technology
- Artificial Intelligence (1.00)
- Communications > Mobile (0.35)
- Information Technology