|
Wednesday, July 11, 2007 Robotic FarmerAutomated weeding could eventually reduce the use of herbicides. By Duncan Graham-Rowe
Scientists in Denmark are developing an agricultural robot for identifying and eliminating weeds. While this might seem like a relatively easy task, it actually requires a lot of machine intelligence to pick out the weeds among the crops. The robot is still in the early stages of development, but the researchers hope that it will ultimately lead to a reduction in the amount of herbicides used by farmers and therefore cut costs. Called Hortibot, the semi-autonomous robot is a navigational platform designed to have different agricultural tools fitted to it to either mechanically remove weeds or precision-spray them with herbicide. "The original purpose was to build a robot that was simple to use and could be operated by an unskilled worker," says Rasmus Jørgensen, an agricultural scientist at the Institute of Agricultural Engineering at Aarhus University, in Horsens, Denmark. Currently, farmers tend to deal with weeds by either spraying entire fields or by using manual laborers to physically remove weeds by hand. But these approaches have their problems, says Jørgensen. Although labor can be cheap, the cost of training workers can mount up. The high turnover of low-skilled workers in agriculture means that farmers often have to pay to train as much as one-third of their work force each year. Indiscriminate spraying of herbicides has an environmental impact, is wasteful, and adds to the cost of farming. And herbicides are normally sprayed using heavy vehicles such as tractors, which in turn cause compaction of the soil. "If the soil is too compact, the roots can't penetrate it, and water can't get through," says Jørgensen. A single tractor and its load can weigh enough to compact soil by as much as half a meter, he says. The aim with Hortibot is to address these issues by enabling a lightweight robot to carry out the same tasks under the supervision of a single worker with little training. Weighing just 245 kilograms--roughly one-fortieth as much as a tractor--the robot is based on a modified framework of a commercially available remote-controlled slope mower called a Spider. Standing a meter tall and roughly a meter and a half wide and long, the four-wheeled Hortibot comes equipped with a downward-looking camera. This enables the robot to navigate autonomously in between several rows of crops without damaging them and without the use of any global-positioning technology. Some agricultural machines now use GPS, but it can be unreliable since it depends on the resolution and accuracy of maps, says Jørgensen. Using a vision-based approach ensures that the robot covers the field more accurately, turning when it reaches the edge of a field to continue winding its way across the entire plot. The human operator is there to guide it to the field and stop it if obstacles emerge. With less than an hour's training and using a simple control stick, anyone can use it, Jørgensen says. At a recent Field Robot Event, held in Wageningen, in the Netherlands, Hortibot was able to follow furrows and autonomously turn in the appropriate direction when it reached the edge of the crop rows. While some of the other robots were able to follow crop lines, they were unable to turn. "We have shown that [Hortibot] is easy to work and can make turns without a lot of planning," says Jørgensen. |
Amoebalike Robots for Search and Rescue
03/29/2007



Comments
amulekii on 07/12/2007 at 6:09 PM
10
lesfilip on 07/12/2007 at 8:49 PM
2
Have a nice day.
briang1621 on 07/12/2007 at 7:47 PM
37
www.techrd.com
Brian Glassman
lesfilip on 07/12/2007 at 8:54 PM
2
jvmoye on 07/13/2007 at 10:10 AM
7
Just tell me the acres per hour, direct costs of operation, how long I may leave it unattended, etc.
Then give me a demo on my farm. If it proves out they will sell like hot cakes just to threaten the chemical sales people.