USA TODAY International Edition

Robot drone bees? It’s not a horror movie; it’s a Walmart patent

Retailer eyes pollinatio­n methods in applicatio­n

- Elizabeth Weise

SAN FRANCISCO – Birds do it. Bees do it. Now even educated Walmart drones may do it.

The world’s largest retailer has applied for a patent for drone pollinator­s to make up for the decline in bees and other insects that fertilize crops and make much of the food the company sells possible.

Walmart’s patent was published March 8 with the U.S. Patent Office but has not yet been approved. It describes small unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, that would be programmed to go from plant to plant collecting pollen and then go on to another plant to deposit that pollen.

A second drone would follow along, checking to make sure the pollen was properly applied.

The die-off in bees, the Earth’s pollinator­s, is a huge concern in agricultur­e. While important commodity crops such as wheat, rice and corn only need the wind to pollinate, many fruits, nuts and some vegetables — including apples, peaches, blueberrie­s and almonds — are dependent on pollinator­s to reproduce.

To combat this, various schemes have been tried to replicate what these winged helpers do for free.

Pollen has been collected and then spread on fields by crop-duster planes, sprayed at plants and — for high-value crops — hand-applied with paint brushes.

Various robotic and drone pollinator­s have been proposed over the past few years. In 2017, a team at Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology demonstrat­ed a 1.5-inch drone that was used to crosspolli­nate Japanese lilies.

Such drones are too inefficien­t and expensive to make up for the die-off of natural pollinator­s caused by overuse of pesticide and habitat destructio­n, so the search for replacemen­ts continues.

The Walmart patent is one example. It describes various versions of small flying drones that would fly from plant to plant, collecting pollen on bristles or sticky material and then depositing the pollen onto other plants. Some could be controlled by computer, some by humans.

They might even buzz. The sixth page of the patent describes an audio output that could be configured to make sounds that would enable the drones to communicat­e with each other and the docking station, though the sounds wouldn’t necessaril­y be insect-like. The patent says only that they could include “any of a variety of tones and other nonverbal sounds.”

Walmart files hundreds of patents each year, many of which never go beyond the “what if?” stage, so it’s not clear how serious the company is in pursuing the dream of a robotic bee.

In a statement to USA TODAY, Walmart would only say, “We’re always thinking about new concepts and ways that will help us further enhance how we serve customers, but we don’t have any further details to share on these patents at this time.”

 ??  ?? KIM LUDBROOK/EPA-EFE
KIM LUDBROOK/EPA-EFE
 ??  ?? A Japanese team’s drone can pollinate flowers like a bee. JAPAN’S NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
A Japanese team’s drone can pollinate flowers like a bee. JAPAN’S NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

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