Bivalves in the St. Mary's River Computer Vision Project
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This model identifies the difference between oysters (Crassostrea virginica), mussels (Geukensia demissa), and barnacles (Cirripedia) in the St. Mary’s River. It will classify the bivalves as mussels and oysters. Barnacles will be included, even though it is a crustacean and not a bivalve. Barnacles are included in this model because they are often mistaken for a small oyster. Bivalves (bivalve mollusk) are any organism that has or is a shell made of two movable parts, typically joined at a hinge. This model is for a class project in AI and Natural History at St. Mary's College of Maryland.
These images are from a yearly study done by the St. Mary’s River Watershed Associaiton (SMRWA) on 12 sites in the St. Mary’s River that aims to capture the process of new oysters joining an existing population. The main focus of the St. Mary’s River Watershed Association work is oysters, but mussels and barnacles often attach to the shells of oysters, which is what inspired this model.
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Cite This Project
If you use this dataset in a research paper, please cite it using the following BibTeX:
@misc{
bivalves-in-the-st.-mary-s-river_dataset,
title = { Bivalves in the St. Mary's River Dataset },
type = { Open Source Dataset },
author = { Sarah },
howpublished = { \url{ https://universe.roboflow.com/sarah-24mxb/bivalves-in-the-st.-mary-s-river } },
url = { https://universe.roboflow.com/sarah-24mxb/bivalves-in-the-st.-mary-s-river },
journal = { Roboflow Universe },
publisher = { Roboflow },
year = { 2024 },
month = { nov },
note = { visited on 2024-11-14 },
}