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THERMAL DRONES SPOT FOREST WILDLIFE TEN TIMES FASTER THAN HUMAN SURVEYS

Techlife News

|

September 20, 2025

A new wave of research is showing that thermal drones can revolutionize the way scientists monitor wildlife, with recent field studies demonstrating they are ten times faster than traditional human surveys at detecting animals in dense forests. The findings highlight how aerial thermal imaging is emerging as a gamechanging tool for conservation, ecology, and even climate adaptation efforts.

THERMAL DRONES SPOT FOREST WILDLIFE TEN TIMES FASTER THAN HUMAN SURVEYS

HOW THERMAL DRONES WORK IN THE FIELD

Thermal drones use infrared cameras to detect the body heat of animals against cooler backgrounds, allowing them to spot creatures hidden under tree canopies, dense vegetation, or at night. This overcomes one of the biggest limitations of human-led wildlife surveys, which rely on visual observation, often missing species that camouflage well or are active after dark.

In recent trials, drones equipped with thermal imaging flew over temperate and tropical forests at dawn and dusk—times when many animals are most active. The drones identified mammals and birds in minutes that might have taken teams of field biologists hours or even days to detect.

"Instead of combing through the forest on foot, drones can scan an entire area in a fraction of the time," said one researcher involved in the study. "It doesn't just save time—it transforms what's possible in conservation."

imageTEN TIMES FASTER, WITH BETTER ACCURACY

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