With bees on decline, mechanical pollination may be solution

The Edete Corporation had developed the mechanical pollination after a drastic fall in bee numbers around the world, largely due to intensive agriculture, the use of pesticides, and climate change

Reuters|
A mechanical hum replaced the buzzing of the bees in one Israeli community this season as farmers, concerned over the global drop in bee populations, tried out a new method of pollinating their crops.

  • Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter

  • Through an almond orchard in the area of Tel Arad in a desert plain in southern Israel, a tractor-pulled a mast equipped with about a dozen small cannons that fired precise shots of pollen at the trees, enabling them to fertilize.
    3 View gallery
    Small cannons that shoot pollen
    Small cannons that shoot pollen
    Small cannons that shoot pollen
    (Photo: Reuters)
    The job is usually done by natural pollinators - most often bees - but there has been a drastic fall in bee numbers around the world, largely due to intensive agriculture, the use of pesticides, and climate change.
    Most crops rely on pollination, so the trend has worried groups like the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization as it looks to fight hunger in the growing human population.
    "We see a crisis in 15 years where we don't have enough insects in the world to actually do pollination and most of our vitamins and fruits are gone," said Eylam Ran, CEO of Edete Precision Technologies for Agriculture.
    3 View gallery
    Almond trees that are being pollinated and fertilized by machine technology
    Almond trees that are being pollinated and fertilized by machine technology
    Joseph Frey of Edete Precision Technologies for Agriculture, gestures towards an almond tree
    (Photo: Reuters)
    His company says its artificial pollinator can augment the labors of - and eventually replace - bees. Its system mirrors the work of the honey bee, beginning with a mechanical harvest of pollen from flowers and ending with a targeted distribution using LIDAR sensors, the same technology used in some self-driving cars.
    3 View gallery
    A bee sits on a flower budding from an almond tree
    A bee sits on a flower budding from an almond tree
    A bee sits on a flower budding from an almond tree
    (Photo: Reuters)
    Edete has been working on a small-scale trial in several orchards in Israel and Australia and has agreements to do the same in the United States. The company hopes to scale up and be ready to sell its products on the market in 2023.
    Comments
    The commenter agrees to the privacy policy of Ynet News and agrees not to submit comments that violate the terms of use, including incitement, libel and expressions that exceed the accepted norms of freedom of speech.
    ""