Ecologically-Constrained Task Arithmetic for Multi-Taxa Bioacoustic Classifiers Without Shared Data
Abstract
BEATs encoders can be combined through task vector arithmetic to create a unified classifier for 661 species without shared data, leveraging near-orthogonal task vectors that align with acoustic niche hypotheses and enabling privacy-preserving collaborative bioacoustics.
Training data for bioacoustics is scattered across taxa, regions, and institutions. Centralizing it all is often infeasible. We show that independently fine-tuned BEATs encoders can be composed into a unified 661-species classifier via task vector arithmetic without sharing data. We find that bioacoustic task vectors are near-orthogonal (cosine 0.01-0.09). Their separation aligns closely with spectral distribution distance, a gradient consistent with the acoustic niche hypothesis. This geometry makes simple averaging optimal while sign-conflict methods reduce accuracy by one to six percentage points. Composition also creates an asymmetric gap: species-rich groups lose accuracy relative to joint training while underrepresented taxa gain, a redistribution useful for equitable biodiversity monitoring. We verify linear mode connectivity across all taxonomic pairs, demonstrate zero-shot transfer to new regions, and identify domain negation as a boundary condition where composition fails. These results enable a collaborative paradigm for bioacoustics where institutions share only task vectors to assemble multi-taxa classifiers, preserving data privacy.
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