Skip to content
Agriculture Farming Rural, Environment

Potential for satellites and AI to help tackle critical invasive species problem

Charles Darwin University 3 mins read

Satellite imagery and artificial intelligence can detect with high accuracy two invasive weed species in Australia, posing a new opportunity for defense against these pervasive plants.

Research conducted by Charles Darwin University (CDU) and Charles Sturt University (CSU) explored the potential for SkySat satellite imagery and AI algorithms to detect and map African lovegrass (Eragrostis curvula) and bitou bush (Chrysanthemoides monilifera ssp. rotundata).

African lovegrass is a highly invasive perennial grass which contributes significantly to the $4 billion per annum required for direct control of all agricultural and environmental weeds. 

Bitou bush, identified by the Australian Government as a Weed of National Significance, is an aggressive shrub which invades coastal dune vegetation. Bitou bush forms dense thicket to smother native plants and can significantly reduce coastal biodiversity.

Detection of these species, particularly African lovegrass, is costly and complicated due to infestations occurring at large scales and in mixed landscapes.

The academics fed SkySat satellite imagery of locations across New South Wales into two machine learning algorithms. One model could detect African lovegrass with 89.9 per cent accuracy and bitou bush with 86.1 per cent accuracy.

Co-author and CDU Spatial Analyst Glen Shennan, who has expertise in African lovegrass, said this method could become a critical component in the cost-efficient, rapid detection and monitoring of invasive plants in Australia.

“Ground sampling is very labor-intensive. If we can make drones and satellites work, it can cut down the cost enormously and you can do this repeatedly to see where the species are spreading,” Mr Shennan said.

“You can identify vulnerable areas you want to prevent these species from spreading to, and you can direct management funds and mitigation funds to where it’s most needed.”

Mr Shennan said there was a desperate need for rapid, cost-effective methods to detect these species, in particular African lovegrass.

“African lovegrass is very opportunistic in the way it grows and can out compete native grasses,” Mr Shennan said.

“It’s not palatable or nutritious. Sheep and cattle avoid as far as possible.

“There's a lot of work going into managing it, but it is herbicide resistant and the only thing that will kill it, it adapts to very quickly.

“It's very fast growing, and grows whenever the weather is right, especially in droughty summers. It likes disturbed ground so if you have a fire come through, it's the first thing that will come back.”

Mr Shennan said the accuracy of the results was significant for African lovegrass because it can be difficult to identify. 

“It looks a lot like poa tussock when it’s young. Even experienced botanists have trouble differentiating the two, which is where satellites and some types of drones come in,” he said. 

“They can identify different colours we can’t see, and with this we hope we can identify its growth patterns.”

The research was supported by the Australian Government’s Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. The study was also authored by CDU Lecturer in Remote Sensing Dr Richard Crabbe, and CSU Senior Lecturer in Livestock Production Management Dr Jane Kelly.

Future avenues of research include expanding the dataset, collaborating with public agencies, and refining the models to reliably differentiate between look-alike species.

Investigating the Potential for the Detection of African Lovegrass and Bitou Bush Using SkySat Earth Observation Satellites was published in the journal Weed Research.


Contact details:

Raphaella Saroukos she/her
Research Communications Officer
Marketing, Media & Communications
Larrakia Country
T: +61 8 8946 6721
M: 0427 895 533
E: 
[email protected]
W: 
cdu.edu.au
 
CDU logo
 
Charles Darwin University acknowledges all First Nations people across the lands on which we live and work, and we pay our respects to Elders both past and present.
CRICOS Provider No. 00300K | RTO Provider No. 0373 | TEQSA Provider ID PRV12069

Media

More from this category

  • Agriculture Farming Rural, Finance Investment
  • 22/02/2026
  • 10:30
Murray Cod Australia Ltd

Chaur brings heightened commercial focus to Murray Cod Australia Ltd

Recently announced new MD & CEO of Murray Cod Australia Limited, Steven Chaur, will run the next phase of the company’s development with an increased focus on domestic channel expansion, revenue growth and operating efficiencies. Mr Chaur, who joined the MCA Board as a Non-Executive Director in January 2025, will assume the MD & CEO role on 20 April. He brings to MCA strong leadership and operational experience across major FMCG brands and agribusinesses, including CEO of Patties Foods (ASX:PFL), Nutrano Produce Group and Castlegate James; and senior executive roles at George Weston Foods, Findus Australia, National Foods Ltd, Simplot…

  • Environment
  • 20/02/2026
  • 10:31
NSW Environment Protection Authority

ILLEGAL DUMPING DROPS BUT THE STATE STILL COUNTING THE COST

Illegal dumping vision and grabs here: https://bit.ly/4pDWrzb A new study has found there has been a marked reduction in the number of NSW residents and businesses illegally dumping waste compared to six years ago, but that the issue remains costly and damaging for communities, councils and the environment. The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) has today released the state’s most comprehensive study of illegal dumping. The Illegal Dumping Research Report is published every five to six years and paints a clear picture of what is driving the problem and where action is still needed. NSW EPA Executive Director of Programs…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Sport Recreation
  • 20/02/2026
  • 10:11
Surfers for Climate

MEDIA ALERT: Surfers Set to Protect Australia’s Last Wild Waves from Industrial Gas Project.

20 February 2026 Margaret River event brings together the surf community to save pristine Scott Reef from Woodside's $16 billion fossil fuel plans. Event Details: What: Wild Waves Forever Margaret River When: Thursday, 26 February 2026, 6:00 PM – 10:00 PM Where: The Common Bistro, 1 Resort Place, Gnarabup Cost: Tickets available via Humanitix (proceeds support Surfers for Climate) Includes: Free Gage Roads beer on arrival (two for FIFO workers) The Wild Waves Forever event on 26 February will feature unseen surf footage shot at Scott Reef – one of Australia's most remote and rarely surfed breaks – alongside an…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.