PARIS: Google Street View can be a useful weapon in the costly and time-consuming fight against invasive species, French biologists said yesterday.
A team at France’s French National Agency for Agricultural Research (INRA) used the online tool, which provides 360-degree images of streets filmed by specially-fitted cars, to gauge the spread of a tree-killing insect.
The pine processionary moth — Thaumetopoea pityocampa in Latin — is a foliage-munching critter that is native to balmy southern Europe but heading northwards and to higher altitudes as temperatures rise.
Its preferred food is an evergreen called the Austrian pine, which is extensively used in Europe’s managed forests and ornamental gardens.
In autumn, larvae of the moth build a nest in which to hunker down for the winter — a highly visible home made from white, shiny silk that hangs at the end of branches like a hairy lightbulb.
Using this as a telltale, the researchers “drove” around a large area with Google Street View to map districts that had been invaded by the moth.
The area of 47,000 square kilometres — bigger than the Netherlands — was divided up into a grid of 183 large-scale “cells”, each comprising 16 km by 16 km.
If a nest was spotted, the “cell” was marked down as infected.
The results from Google Street View were 90 percent as accurate as a test conducted on the ground by a human, who drove around the area in a car.
However, cyber-spotting was less successful in a different test that was carried out on a smaller scale. AFP