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Endangered rhinos are now being protected by powerful data analytics

After poaching surged recently, the South African government turned to techniques more often used to study consumers to help identify–and shut down–the networks that connect illegal guns, poachers, and rhino horn buyers.

Endangered rhinos are now being protected by powerful data analytics

[Source Photo: Glen Carrie/Unsplash]

BY Adele Peters3 minute read

The technological fight against wildlife poaching usually happens inside preserves, from drones that search for intruders to AI that predicts when the next attack will happen. But one project in South Africa looked at an earlier step in the process: Using data analytics tools that are more commonly used in marketing, a company mapped out networks of rhino poachers–and discovered that the guns that they used were coming from a particular supplier in Europe.

“The data actually tells you a story as soon as you start stitching it all together,” says Anni Toner-Russell, managing director for Data Shack, a South Africa-based data science company that worked with the South African National Parks Board to analyze the crisis in rhino poaching.

Poaching has surged in South Africa over the last decade and thousands of rhinos have been killed for their horns  In 2007, only 13 were killed. But that jumped to 83 a year later. 333 animals died in 2010, and by 2014, the number had climbed to 1,215. Much of the poaching happens in Kruger National Park, a preserve that sprawls over an area larger than the state of Massachusetts.

[Image: courtesy Data Shack]

Data Shack had previously worked with the mining industry to study the illicit diamond trade, and as the team learned about crime syndicates, they realized that some of the same techniques could be useful to tackle the problem of poaching. Beginning in late 2014, the company gathered data from a variety of sources–the serial numbers on guns left behind in parks, police data, intelligence data, social media posts that show relationships between people–and then used tools from Tibco, a data analytics software company, to study the links. Since the work began, the number of rhinos killed has slowly but steadily started to drop.

“We can connect the dots and try and understand how these people networks are stitched together, and try and figure out patterns…and how these transactions basically happen,” says Toner-Russell. “[That has] led us to bringing down the poaching numbers.”

Often, she says, organizations working on the problem don’t necessarily have access to data from other sources. They also haven’t had data analytics tools to look for connections that might not otherwise be obvious. Data Shack used analytical clustering and segmentation algorithms–tools that can surface patterns in people and behavior. In marketing, the tools are used to study consumers.

“People know the application of certain of these techniques very well–clustering [similar] customers together and understanding what to sell them next,” she says. “But it takes thinking out of the box to go and say, with what I’ve learned from industry, how can I apply it to using data for the greater good?”

[Image: courtesy Data Shack]

As the company analyzed poaching data, it was able to trace where poachers were getting guns, and discovered that weapons were underreported when they were imported. Within the first six months, the project started leading to arrests and shutting down of supply chains. The team learned that a single supplier in Europe was the primary source for guns (for legal reasons, Toner-Russell says that she can’t name the company), and issued a final report in early 2018. The government was able to begin tightening import regulations in late 2018, which should further disrupt the supply to poachers.

“What has been done is much stricter controls in import regulations, and much more checks and balances in how the transactions are handled,” she says. “I think the emphasis before was more on trying to follow poachers in a national park rather than actually looking at where the means are coming from, who’s paying them, where they’re getting the actual guns to do this. We looked at it from a different point of view. If you block the supply chain, you start blocking the events.”

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adele Peters is a senior writer at Fast Company who focuses on solutions to climate change and other global challenges, interviewing leaders from Al Gore and Bill Gates to emerging climate tech entrepreneurs like Mary Yap. She contributed to the bestselling book "Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century" and a new book from Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies called State of Housing Design 2023 More


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