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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cutler, Sadie, DeFay, Ben, McArt, Scott, Petersen, Kirstin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.03974
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author Cutler, Sadie
DeFay, Ben
McArt, Scott
Petersen, Kirstin
author_facet Cutler, Sadie
DeFay, Ben
McArt, Scott
Petersen, Kirstin
contents Pollinators are critical to the world's ecosystems and food supply, yet recent studies have found pollination shortfalls in several crops, including strawberry. This is troubling because wild and managed pollinators are currently experiencing declines. One possibility is to try and provide supplemental pollination solutions. These solutions should be affordable and simple for farmers to implement if their use is to be widespread; quadcopters are a great example, already used for monitoring on many farms. This paper investigates a new method for artificial pollination based on wind pollination that bears further investigation. After determining the height where the lateral flow is maximized, we performed field experiments with a quadcopter assisting natural pollinators. Although our results in the field were inconclusive, lab studies show that the idea shows promise and could be adapted for better field results.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_03974
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Use of Quadcopter Wakes to Supplement Strawberry Pollination
Cutler, Sadie
DeFay, Ben
McArt, Scott
Petersen, Kirstin
Systems and Control
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Pollinators are critical to the world's ecosystems and food supply, yet recent studies have found pollination shortfalls in several crops, including strawberry. This is troubling because wild and managed pollinators are currently experiencing declines. One possibility is to try and provide supplemental pollination solutions. These solutions should be affordable and simple for farmers to implement if their use is to be widespread; quadcopters are a great example, already used for monitoring on many farms. This paper investigates a new method for artificial pollination based on wind pollination that bears further investigation. After determining the height where the lateral flow is maximized, we performed field experiments with a quadcopter assisting natural pollinators. Although our results in the field were inconclusive, lab studies show that the idea shows promise and could be adapted for better field results.
title Use of Quadcopter Wakes to Supplement Strawberry Pollination
topic Systems and Control
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.03974