Google Street View can be a useful weapon in the costly and time-consuming fight against invasive species, French biologists said today.
A team at France's French National Agency for Agricultural Research (INRA) used the online tool, which provides 360-degree images of streets filmed by specially-fitted cars, to gauge the spread of a tree-killing insect.
The pine processionary moth -- Thaumetopoea pityocampa in Latin -- is a foliage-munching critter that is native to balmy southern Europe but heading northwards and to higher altitudes as temperatures rise.
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In autumn, larvae of the moth build a nest in which to hunker down for the winter -- a highly visible home made from white, shiny silk that hangs at the end of branches like a hairy lightbulb.
Using this as a telltale, the researchers "drove" around a large area with Google Street View to map districts that had been invaded by the moth.
The area of 47,000 square kilometres (18,100 square miles) -- bigger than the Netherlands -- was divided up into a grid of 183 large-scale "cells", each comprising 16 kms by 16 kms (10 miles by 10 miles).
If a nest was spotted, the "cell" was marked down as infected.
The results from Google Street View were 90 percent as accurate as a test conducted on the ground by a human, who drove around the area in a car.
However, cyber-spotting was less successful in a different test that was carried out on a smaller scale.
A test area of 121 square kilometres (46 sq. Miles) was marked out in smaller "cells", but Google Street View performed less well, partly because of a lack of roads in some places.
Google Street View can be performed "in silico sampling of species occurrences", the scientists said, in a Latin quip about the use of computers as a substitute for boots-on-the-ground humans.