Walmart files patent for robot bees.

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  • #84084
    wv
    Participant

    What could possibly go wrong.

    w
    v

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    Robot Bees:https://www.rt.com/usa/421409-walmart-patent-robotic-bees-pollination/

    Robot bees: Walmart plots global pollination

    US retail giant Walmart has filed a patent for robotic bees that it hopes will be able to pollinate crops just like their real-life counterparts. The ‘robo-bee’ could provide a solution to the ongoing decline of bee populations.

    The patent for the co-called ‘pollination drones’ was filed earlier in March as part of a series of six focusing on automated farming. The robobees would, according to the patent, use a “pollen applicator configured to collect pollen from a flower of a first crop” and then, using sensors and cameras, find their way to other flowers to apply said pollen onto them.

    Though it’s not immediately clear what the company’s plans for the robotic swarm patent are, some analysts have suggested that the retail giant is hoping to gain a stronger foothold in agriculture and gain more control over its supply chain.

    Honeybees, responsible for pollinating almost a third of the food eaten by humans, have been dying at an alarming rate over the past number of years. The decline of the honeybee is said to be the result of a phenomenon called ‘Colony Collapse Disorder’ though the exact cause of the decline is not yet known.

    One recent study points to commonly used fungicides as a major culprit. “We threw everything but the kitchen sink at this analysis and the ‘winner’ was fungicides,” study lead author Scott McArt back in December. “It turns out that fungicide use is the best predictor of bumblebees getting sick and being lost from sites across the US.”

    Perhaps robotic swarms of bees, like the one produced by Harvard University researchers in 2013, offer a feasible solution for mankind in a world in which real bees are being placed on the endangered species list….see link

    #84145
    Zooey
    Moderator
    #84180
    nittany ram
    Moderator
    #84187
    wv
    Participant

    “So even though bees were disappearing in alarming ways and at alarming rates, their population never actually saw a significant decline. The number of honeybee colonies peaked in 1989, at 3.5 million colonies; in 2008, two years after CCD was first characterized, that number dipped to 2.4 million, the worst year for honeybee populations in recorded history. Since their lowest point, honeybee populations in the U.S. have climbed at a modest pace and now stand at 2.7 million colonies…”
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    Well 2.7 still sounds pretty low compared to 3.5.

    At any rate, i dont pay much attention to combine numbers. Its just bees in underwear as far as I’m concerned. I only pay attention to how bees actually sting.

    w
    v

    #84189
    wv
    Participant

    PS. That author of the bee article has done some interesting articles:http://www.slate.com/authors.matt_miller_1.html

    w
    v

    #84197
    nittany ram
    Moderator

    “So even though bees were disappearing in alarming ways and at alarming rates, their population never actually saw a significant decline. The number of honeybee colonies peaked in 1989, at 3.5 million colonies; in 2008, two years after CCD was first characterized, that number dipped to 2.4 million, the worst year for honeybee populations in recorded history. Since their lowest point, honeybee populations in the U.S. have climbed at a modest pace and now stand at 2.7 million colonies…”
    ===========================

    Well 2.7 still sounds pretty low compared to 3.5.

    At any rate, i dont pay much attention to combine numbers. Its just bees in underwear as far as I’m concerned. I only pay attention to how bees actually sting.

    w
    v

    Well, absolute numbers don’t tell the story. It’s the trend.

    Besides, maybe 3.5 million was too many bees. Ever think of that?

    I, for one, will rest easier knowing that the dangerously unsustainable bee population has been culled to manageable levels.

    Thanks to our noble benefactors, the fungicide, and the parasitic Varroa mite.

    #84205
    wv
    Participant

    Thanks to our noble benefactors, the fungicide, and the parasitic Varroa mite.

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    Well apparently the noble Varroa Mites are gonna be facing some adversity.

    …btw, i fear that if bees start vaccinating themselves against mites, they mite give themselves autism.

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