Florida community installs AI beehives for crop pollination

Summary

A Florida community installed AI-powered beehives to monitor colonies and support crop pollination amid bee population declines.

Why this matters

Bee declines have raised concerns for agriculture because pollinators are important to food production and ecosystems. The project shows how automated hive monitoring is being used to support beekeeping and crop pollination.

A master-planned community in Land O’ Lakes, Florida, installed an automated beehive system that uses robotics, sensors, and artificial intelligence to monitor hive health as bee populations face pressure across the United States.

The community uses bees to pollinate a 2.5-acre farm that helps supply produce used throughout the development.

“Bees pollinate roughly 75% of the crops we eat and about 80% of flowering plants around the word,” Beewise Managing Director Steve Peck said. “So, without those bees, our food supply is in jeopardy.”

Peck said the system uses internal cameras, sensors, and robotic components to inspect hives and identify problems that would otherwise require manual oversight.

“The robotics know where it is in the frame or where it is in the hive at any point,” Peck said. “It can pick it up just like a beekeeper would, inspect it, and report that back to technicians around the world.”

According to the company, the system tracks queen health, egg production, and infestations from varroa mites, a major factor in honeybee colony collapse. Peck said the technology can also respond when threats are detected.

Peck said the technology is operating across hundreds of thousands of acres of agricultural land nationwide. Project officials said the system is meant to support, not replace, traditional beekeeping.

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