[Pollinator] drones as pollinators

Kit Prendergast kitprendergast21 at gmail.com
Fri Feb 10 18:05:26 PST 2017


I wholeheartedly agree Peter, well put. Pollination requires particular
behaviours, and flower morphologies often reflect this (eg those requiring
sonication, sexually deciptive orchids, papillinous flowers) Drones really
would only be on par with wind pollinated plants.
Kit
On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 at 2:20 am, Peter Bernhardt <bernhap2 at slu.edu> wrote:

> It might be best to write this letter in the vein of, "well this is cute
> but whacking a flower with a drone isn't enough to effect pollination at
> this moment in technology." Many of our crop plants still require
> cross-pollintation (e.g. most apples and those pretty lilies) so the drone
> must contact individual plants compatible with each other  and have  both a
> way of retaining viable pollen grains between flights and pin-pointing the
> location of the receptive tip of the pistil.  Does the drone "know" when
> the anthers are releasing pollen and can it tell when the stigma (pistil
> tip) is receptive to pollen?  What the video also shows is the drone
> bruising the flower.  If pistils are injured on impact they become infected
> with bacteria and fungi dying before they set fruit (try a little
> tenderness).
>
> In fact, one of the last robot stories written by Isaac Asimov touched on
> this.  He imagined a time in which robot drones replaced dangerous
> insecticides. The bird-shaped drones were programmed only to catch specific
> insects attacking crops, stock and people.
>
> Peter
>
> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 9:03 AM, David Inouye <inouye at umd.edu> wrote:
>
> I hadn't considered a letter to the editor, but encourage you to see
> whether they would accept one. Another colleague pointed out that most crop
> and fruit tree flowers are a lot smaller than the lily flower shown in the
> video, and it's unlikely a drone could pollinate them.
>
>
>
> On 2/10/2017 7:38 AM, Barbara Passero wrote:
>
> Hi David and others,
>
> This idea is ridiculous, of course. And dangerous because the average
> person reading this article would say, "Great. Now I don't have to worry
> anymore about the fate of bees or eating only corn, wheat, and rice." Do
> you usually send a stock letter to the editor to correct this misleading
> information?
>
> Thanks, Barbara
>
> -----Original Message----- From: David Inouye
> Sent: Thursday, February 09, 2017 1:06 PM
> To: pollinator at coevolution.org
> Subject: [Pollinator] drones as pollinators
>
>
> https://nexusmedianews.com/this-drone-can-do-the-work-of-honeybees-326f6d1a40c1#.3k4pqg9r1
>
>
>
> --
> Dr. David W. Inouye
> Professor Emeritus
> Department of Biology
> University of Maryland
> College Park, MD 20742-4415
> inouye at umd.edu
>
> Principal Investigator
> Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory
> PO Box 519
> Crested Butte, CO 81224
>
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