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Leafsnap App: Identify Trees With An iPhone Or iPad

By BRETT ZONGKER   06/ 8/11 11:32 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- If you've ever wondered what type of tree was nearby but didn't have a guide book, a new smartphone app allows users with no formal training to satisfy their curiosity and contribute to science at the same time.

Scientists have developed the first mobile app to identify plants by simply photographing a leaf. The free iPhone and iPad app, called Leafsnap, instantly searches a growing library of leaf images amassed by the Smithsonian Institution. In seconds, it returns a likely species name, high-resolution photographs and information on the tree's flowers, fruit, seeds and bark.

Users make the final identification and share their findings with the app's growing database to help map the population of trees one mobile phone at a time.

Leafsnap debuted in May, covering all the trees in New York's Central park and Washington's Rock Creek Park. It has been downloaded more than 150,000 times in the first month, and its creators expect it to continue to grow as it expands to Android phones.

By this summer, it will include all the trees of the Northeast and eventually will cover all the trees of North America.

Smithsonian research botanist John Kress, who created the app with engineers from Columbia University and the University of Maryland, said it was originally conceived in 2003 as a high-tech aid for scientists to discover new species in unknown habitats. The project evolved, though, with the emergence of smartphones to become a new way for citizens to contribute to research.

"This is going to be able to populate a database of every tree in the United States," Kress said. "I mean that's millions and millions and millions of trees, so that would be really neat."

It's also the first real chance for citizens to directly access some of the science based on the nearly 5 million specimens kept by the U.S. National Herbarium at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. The collection began in 1848 and is among the world's 10 largest plant collections.

Kress said it will allow users to easily learn about the plant diversity in their yards and parks. It also includes games and could be used to build lessons or scavenger hunts for schools.

For Colleen Greene, an avid hiker and a librarian at California State University, Fullerton, the app immediately caught her eye on an educational website for its potential to engage citizen scientists and especially students. She has already downloaded the app and started trying to use it, even though it won't cover all West Coast trees for some time.

"If we lug our wildflower and track finder books out with us, something like this is much more engaging and much more portable," she said. "For young people, for young adults, students, I could see them just eating this up."

There's just one catch for her – a demonstration video shows a girl plucking a leaf off a tree to take a snapshot with the app. That's a violation of "leave no trace" principals for outdoor stewardship and illegal in many parks, including national parks, Greene said.

"You know, one or two leaves may be not such a big deal, but if it's a popular, highly used app, I would think it could eventually cause some issues," she said.

At the Smithsonian, Kress said the app is an important tool because learning about the environment is the first step in conserving it.

"We are of course concerned about the impact we have on nature, but as educators and scientists, we think the value of helping people learn more about the environment outweighs the small impact of plucking a few leaves," he said.

To identify a tree, it works best if users place a leaf on a white background to photograph. Engineers used facial recognition technology to devise an algorithm that could identify a leaf by its shape and features. The image is uploaded to a server, and within seconds it returns a ranking of the most likely tree species a user has found, along with other characteristics to help confirm the tree's identity.

Users make the final identification.

To create a reliable database as the app's backbone, the team started by photographing leaves from the Smithsonian's vast collection of specimens. It became clear, though, that they would need images of living specimens for the application to work correctly. A nonprofit group called Finding Species was called in to capture thousands of images of leaves for the app.

Beyond finding answers about the world of trees, even casual users can contribute to scientific research. Images and tree identifications are automatically sent with mapping information from the phone to Leafsnap's database. Scientists said that data could eventually be used to map and monitor the growth and decline of tree populations.

The iPad version also includes a feature called "Nearby Species" to show all the trees that have been labeled by others near a user's location.

Such a reinvented field guide, as simple as a Google search, wouldn't have been possible just a few years ago before the emergence of smartphones, said computer science Professor Peter Belhumeur, who directs Columbia University's Laboratory for the Study of Visual Appearance and helped create the app.

"People often think of technology as alienating us from other people or the outside world," Belhumeur said. "I hope that this technology helps connect us with our natural environment."

Other apps have been developed to identify songs from short clips recorded on a smartphone or to find restaurants. More science apps could be on the way as well.

Belhumeur said his son, William, already is thinking of apps they could create to identify fish or bugs. Smithsonian scientists are exploring such possibilities with butterflies and other critters, Kress said.

Scientists also are getting requests to expand the app's capabilities to cover trees in France, Morocco, Thailand and elsewhere.

"We want to spread this, not across the United States, but across the world," Belhumeur said.

It's just a matter of collecting and photographing all the tree species native to a region.

Leafsnap cost about $2.5 million to develop, funded primarily by a grant from the National Science Foundation. It will cost another $1 million to expand it within the next 18 months to cover all the trees of the United States, involving about 800 species.

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WASHINGTON -- If you've ever wondered what type of tree was nearby but didn't have a guide book, a new smartphone app allows users with no formal training to satisfy their curiosity and contribute to ...
WASHINGTON -- If you've ever wondered what type of tree was nearby but didn't have a guide book, a new smartphone app allows users with no formal training to satisfy their curiosity and contribute to ...
WASHINGTON -- If you've ever wondered what type of tree was nearby but didn't have a guide book, a new smartphone app allows users with no formal training to satisfy their curiosity and contribute to ...
WASHINGTON -- If you've ever wondered what type of tree was nearby but didn't have a guide book, a new smartphone app allows users with no formal training to satisfy their curiosity and contribute to ...
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adamben
yes i said yes i will yes
12:51 PM on 06/13/2011
wow, that is soo cool!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LeaderofMen
Bilingual former US Marine.
10:34 AM on 06/12/2011
I downloaded it then had to delete it. It didn't identify any trees here in Chicago. I'll have to wait for the database to expand before it works here.
10:01 PM on 06/11/2011
Oh, how cool! Not a fan of apple, or paying an extra fee for a smart phone, but this is almost enough to make me want one!
09:46 PM on 06/10/2011
wow. thank you for making everyone even more brain dead with this app..
03:24 PM on 06/10/2011
Well I`ll have to get one of those iPhone things.....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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cuoi
The obstacle is the path
03:18 PM on 06/10/2011
Is there an app to ID cannabis leaf?
03:56 PM on 06/10/2011
Cannabis is not a tree, furthermore it is one of the more recognizable plants on the planet.
09:48 PM on 06/10/2011
it's a woody plant and a subspecies of a tree.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dnietz
Tired of censorship? Reddit
03:07 PM on 06/10/2011
Nice, but I'll have to wait for the Android app.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Allison Winkler
If social engineering persists, I'm an ex-pat
03:02 PM on 06/10/2011
Just the other day I was talking about how cool something like this would be and whala...here it is!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
endunagazi
02:56 PM on 06/10/2011
So great! Just yesterday I cut some leaves off my trees to bring to a nursery to ID them. A gardening nerd's dream app!
02:36 PM on 06/10/2011
This is exactly the app I was wishing for when I first got my iPhone.
02:15 PM on 06/10/2011
That's so cool. We're looking for a tree for our parkway and I'm getting a little tired of trekking leaves over to my local nursery only for him to say "hmmm, not sure".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Milks
Ecologist
05:45 PM on 06/10/2011
Take those leaves to your local college/university or an arboretum. The botanists there would likely be happy to identify your trees. Best chances of identification comes if you clip a small branch containing several leaves, as the arrangement of leaves on the branch/stem is one of the first characteristics we use in sorting plants. Bonus points if you also get a flower as some species of trees (for example, the dogwoods (Cornus sp.)) are impossible to identify correctly without flowers.
01:37 PM on 06/10/2011
Ok but do they have an identify that bird call App to go with it?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
we-r-stardust
Time flies like an arrow Fruit flies like a banana
03:20 PM on 06/10/2011
I`m going out on a limb here but I`ll say no..... ;-)
03:27 PM on 06/10/2011
I'ld suspect you are correct. Visual systems are far more precise than audio on handheld devices.
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thaggas
JackpotFishyPoopyPants
11:57 PM on 06/21/2011
They have apps that identify songs, so bird calls should be coming.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
repetter
01:24 PM on 06/10/2011
What a fabulous concept and app. Can't wait for the Android version. When out and about, I almost never have my field guide, but always have my phone. Congrats to the developers.
01:42 PM on 06/10/2011
Same here and ironically I was recently out and about and came across a tree that my memory failed me on and thought I need an app for that.

One could see great potential upgrades for a app like this that would make it even more practically useful for homeowners for example by linking it with proper pruning and care information etc...
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NickHP
engineer, human, humane
01:19 PM on 06/10/2011
Fun app. Not so reliable. Not every leaf type is covered. Washington area.... Would be nice if they could remove the white background requirement - maybe letting us trace out the active portion of the image with our finger would work...
01:10 PM on 06/10/2011
This is totally awesome. There are some great trees in my area, and I've been wanting to definitively identify some of them so I can plant them on my property. Plus it's just way nerdy cool.

Would love to see this expand to plants, flowers and evergreens.