Data in Brief (Jun 2024)

Data from three camera trapping pilots in the Amsterdam Water Supply Dunes of the Netherlands

  • Julian C. Evans,
  • Rotem Zilber,
  • W. Daniel Kissling

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54
p. 110544

Abstract

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This paper presents the data (images, observations, metadata) of three different deployments of camera traps in the Amsterdam Water Supply Dunes, a Natura 2000 nature reserve in the coastal dunes of the Netherlands. The pilots were aimed at determining how different types of camera deployment (e.g. regular vs. wide lens, various heights, inside/outside exclosures) might influence species detections, and how to deploy autonomous wildlife monitoring networks. Two pilots were conducted in herbivore exclosures and mainly detected European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) and red fox (Vulpes vulpes). The third pilot was conducted outside exclosures, with the European fallow deer (Dama dama) being most prevalent. Across all three pilots, a total of 47,597 images were annotated using the Agouti platform. All annotations were verified and quality-checked by a human expert. A total of 2,779 observations of 20 different species (including humans) were observed using 11 wildlife cameras during 2021–2023. The raw image files (excluding humans), image metadata, deployment metadata and observations from each pilot are shared using the Camtrap DP open standard and the extended data publishing capabilities of GBIF to increase the findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability of this data. The data are freely available and can be used for developing artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms that automatically detect and identify species from wildlife camera images.

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