ZME Science on MSN
Scientists used radar to identify bees by their wingbeats and it could change how we track pollinators
Pollinators like bees and butterflies are vanishing across the world due to toxic pesticides and habitat loss, threatening ...
Insects are everywhere, crawling across sidewalks, hanging out in our gardens, and even invading our homes. Despite inhabiting nearly every corner of the planet, many of the most common insect species ...
IEEE Spectrum on MSN
Radar can tell the difference between insect species
Micro-Doppler signatures could help monitor vital pollinator populations ...
Pollinating insects are important for agriculture and ecological flourishing, but they are difficult to monitor, as identification is tricky, labor-intensive, and typically requires killing some ...
UD’s Insect Research Collection provides Solomon Hendrix the tools to turn a passion for identifying insects into a future in entomological discovery At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Solomon ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. As the weather warms up, few of us can resist a nice evening walk through the park, or a trip to the countryside to immerse ...
16don MSN
Bee more specific: New radar tech could improve identification and tracking of key pollinators
Scientists from Trinity and Technical University of Denmark have developed a new radar-based technique that could address a critical gap in global conservation efforts, by transforming how we identify ...
Angela Mech, assistant professor of Entomology at University of Maine, has been leading the research for the i-Tree pest predictor. Mech specializes in invasive forest insects. University of Maine ...
Many research articles that I have found, as well as your recent post about tracking insects using radio frequency identification (see How Can I Track Insects Via RFID?), focus on identifying bugs at ...
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