Due to technological progress, the tropical rainforest has been greatly affected. Not only are trees cut down, there are also good aspects of this precious resource technology. Peter White, principal contributor of National Geographic magazine, says: "The rainforest is probably the main experience of nature, not only from the way things are done, but also from all sorts of things all people can learn from it, what could have happened?" (24). The rainforest is the key to our environment, and all the technologies are destroying it, so there are few alternatives to it.
According to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Technical Review report, San Francisco's non-profit organization Rainforest Connectiona developed an inexpensive and rigorous acoustic monitoring system made from improved mobile phones and solar panels. So-called apps on Guardian devices can always be hidden in trees throughout the forest, listening to signs of illegal logging and animal poaching. Nonprofit organizations use Google's TensorFlow to more accurately detect unpleasant sounds in uploaded audio, such as chainsaws, cars, and gunfire.
One of the reasons why it is difficult to protect tropical rainforests is their size. The Amazon rainforest is 23 times bigger than Britain and can not be monitored manually. This is why organizations like tropical rainforest connections are made artificial intelligence. To connect tropical rainforests, we combine solar panels and mobile phones to build an inexpensive and rigorous acoustic monitoring system. They call these Guardian devices and use artificial intelligence to monitor logging sounds that are far away like a chain saw or a car and can not be detected by the human ear. When these sounds are detected, the device warns the authorities to intervene in real time.
Unfortunately, part of the rainforest in New Jersey is destroyed every year. There are many reasons for destroying the rainforest, from cutting trees to making places for farms and roads. As tropical rainforests play an important role in our world, many groups oppose destruction of the rain forest.
When the Rainforest Alliance opened an office in Costa Rica in the late 1980s, the oldest staff witnessed destruction of the nearby tropical rainforest. I will go to the ground to give way to farms and livestock farms. Since then, conservation of biodiversity has become a central part of the mission of the Rainforest Alliance. Unfortunately our conclusion on the protection of biodiversity scientists is that we are on the verge of the sixth mass extinction of the planet. The main cause of the loss of this devastating species is human activity, affecting about 35.8 million acres (14.5 million hectares) of forest every year. This is about the same size as Bangladesh or New York State.