Haikubox is an
artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled device which automatically and continuously identifies backyard birds using their vocalizations. Haikubox was developed by Loggerhead Instruments which also develops and manufactures
bioacoustics equipment for oceanographic research.[1]
Haikubox website and mobile app
Haikubox uses a
neural net developed through a collaboration with the creators of BirdNET Sound ID[2] at the
Cornell Lab of Ornithology's K. Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics.[3]
Each Haikubox becomes a node in a
passive acoustic monitoring (PAM)[4] network which researchers can use to map bird behavior. PAM, especially when paired with
machine learning, is emerging as an efficient, non-invasive and low-cost way to study animals and their behavioral responses to environmental change.[5] An article published online by bioGraphic[6] and later in Living Bird Magazine,[7] summarized the history of bioacoustics and outlined the potential of PAM to revolutionize scientific research and conservation efforts, noting that Haikubox is "one of the products of this revolution."
Haikubox has been reviewed in WIRED Magazine,[8] Audubon Magazine,[9] Birdwatching Magazine,[10] and Axios Tampa Bay,[11] and appeared on the WIRED Wish List 2022[12] and a 2023 guide to best bird watching gear.[13]
The device was named "Haikubox" because it observes nature, much like
haiku poems which capture a moment in time and often focus on nature imagery.