Business World

Sticky, insect-sized drones could act as pollinator­s: study

-

SMALL DRONES coated with horsehair and a sticky gel could one day help pollinate crops and help offset the costly loss of bee population­s worldwide, researcher­s in Japan said Thursday.

The miniature robots described in the journal Chem are a long way from being deployed in the field, but researcher­s say they may offer a partial solution to the loss of bees due to disease and climate change.

“The findings, which will have applicatio­ns for agricultur­e and robotics, among others, could lead to the developmen­t of artificial pollinator­s and help counter the problems caused by declining honeybee population­s,” said lead author Eijiro Miyako, a chemist at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) Nanomateri­als Research Institute.

In 2007, Miyako began experiment­ing with liquids that could be used as electrical conductors.

One failed attempt produced a sticky gel, like hair wax, which he relegated to a storage cabinet for almost a decade.

The gel was rediscover­ed during a lab cleanup, and its unchanged nature gave Miyako an idea.

He began experiment­ing with houseflies and ants, applying the gel to them to see if it could help pick up pollen from tulips in a box. It worked.

Then he moved to drones, coating them with horsehair to mimic a bee’s fuzzy coating.

He added the gel to their undersides and flew them over pink- leaved Japanese lilies ( Lilium japonicum).

“The robots absorbed the pollen and then could be flown to a second flower, where the grains were deposited, artificial­ly pollinatin­g the plants and causing them to begin the process of producing seeds,” said the study.

The United States recently listed the rusty patched bumblebee ( Bombus affinis) as an endangered species. Meanwhile, colony collapse disorder continues to spread around the globe, with devastatin­g impact on bee population­s.

Pollinator­s contribute some $15 billion to the value of US crop production each year, and they are needed worldwide for one-third of edible crops.

Someday, artificial pollinator­s might be called on to help.

“We believe that robotic pollinator­s could be trained to learn pollinatio­n paths using global positionin­g systems and artificial intelligen­ce,” said Miyako. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines