Plant Taxonomy Meets Plant Counting: A Fine-Grained, Taxonomic Dataset for Counting Hundreds of Plant Species
Jinyu Xu ⋅ Tianqi Hu ⋅ Xiaonan Hu ⋅ Letian Zhou ⋅ Songliang Cao ⋅ Meng Zhang ⋅ Hao Lu
Abstract
Visually cataloging and quantifying the natural world requires pushing the boundaries of both detailed visual classification and counting at scale. Despite significant progress, particularly in crowd and traffic analysis, the fine-grained, taxonomy-aware plant counting remains underexplored in vision. In contrast to crowds, plants are complicated by nonrigid morphologies and physical appearance variations across growth stages and environments. Tofill this gap, we present TPC-268, the first plant counting benchmark taking plant taxonomy into account. Our dataset couples instance-level point annotations with complete Linnaean labels (kingdom$\rightarrow$species) and organ categories, enabling hierarchical reasoning and species-aware evaluation. The datasetfeatures $10,000$ images with $678,090$ point annotations, includes $268$ countable plant categories over $242$ plant species in Plantae and Fungi, and spans observation scales from canopy-level remote sensing imagery to tissue-level microscopy.We follow the problem setting of class-agnostic counting (CAC), provide taxonomy-consistent, scale-aware data splits, and benchmark state-of-the-art regression- and detection-based CAC approaches. By capturing the biodiversity, hierarchical structure, and multi-scale nature of botanical and mycological taxa, TPC-268 provides a biologically grounded testbed to advance fine-grained class-agnostic counting.
Successful Page Load