Author Archives: ChristinaLee

New tracking system could show-at last- how pesticides are harming bee colonies

We see the use of insecticides all around the world because it is something that is necessary for our own population. Insecticides is something that we depend on for the survival of our crops. However, as much as humanity may need them, not all of them are beneficial for the world. There is one type of insecticide that harms the important bee pollinators – the neonicotinoids. At high doses, the chemicals that make up insecticides can enter the pollen and nectar of flowers and harm bees’ memory, which consequently affect the bees’ ability to harvest nectar.

Neonicotinoid Pesticides Affects Bees’ Social Behaviour
Source: Organic Authority

To further investigate how this happens, researchers have come up with a tracking technique that makes note of how neonicotinoids reduce and affect the activity of bees. Previous research studied the damaging effects of neonicotinoids on the environment as a whole, but most of them did not extend towards how pesticides could specifically harm bee colonies.

Video down Below.

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To see how pesticides were affecting bee colonies, James Crall, an animal behaviour biologist at Harvard University, glued small tags to the backs of bees from approximately a dozen colonies. He then used tracking software to capture their movements as they were given sugar syrup coated with a small amount of a common neonicotinoid called an imidacloprid. As a result, the bees’ activity level, including their social interactions, decreased as the bees cared less about their brood.

Source: Wired
Tags on the back of bees to track their behaviour and movement

This was a notable finding as collectivism and working for the brood is integral to the survival of a bee colony. Crall also noted that the bees’ level of lethargy increased during the night and that their abilities to regulate temperature also hindered. Despite the potential benefits that insecticides may bring to our agriculture, they are undoubtedly harmful for some of our species, including the bees.

Source: Phys.org
Bee colonies collapsing as they are decreasing in numbers. Less social interactions.

As such, the question arises as to whether our need for pesticides is greater than our need for our natural pollinators, which is something that cannot be answered so easily.

-Christina Lee

Fiberglass-spinning robots could be construction workers of the future

Similar to how a silkworm spins a cocoon from a single thread, there is a new man-made robot that also creates things from a single thread. The only difference is that while a silkworm builds a cocoon for a home, the robot builds custom-shaped fiberglass structures for further construction.

Robots that can spin fiberglass thread. Their silicon balloons are shown on the left and the various types of fiberglass structures formed are shown on the right. Source: Science News

Once programmed, these robots are capable of building woven fiberglass tubes that can create large structures such as buildings and bridges, without the continued help of humans. Because they can be independent after being programmed, the robots become especially useful when it comes to infrastructural development in areas where humans cannot go.

Down below is a video of how these robots build fiberglass structures.

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When it comes to size, these robots are only a little bigger than a 1-liter bottle. This is including the silicone balloon with propeller arms located on the top of the robot. These “arms” are primarily used to build fiberglass structures by producing a resin-coated thread, which is then hardened through ultraviolet light. As a result, the threads are glued into one larger piece that is usually at a length of 9-centimeters. Once formed, the silicone balloon deflates and tilts to bend the segment into different shapes and sizes.

The components of the Fibreglass Spinning Robots. Source: Archpaper

Markus Kayser, a designer and roboticist at MIT, and his colleagues tested the fiberglass structure made by the automated robots. They found that the structures could withstand cold weather for up to seven months without any damage. In addition, they have found that the robots could join other construction robots to build more complex structures.

Robots building tube-shaped fiberglass structures in extreme weathers. Source: Science News

One limitation is that because these robots receive orders from a computer, they can only create pre-registered and pre-designed infrastructures. However, as these machines advance in technology, there is a high possibility that they will be capable of doing much more. There is hope that they may even be part structural development in areas such as underwater or even on other planets.