http://www.treehugger.com/clean-technology/startup-using-drones-plant-trees-110th-usual-cost.html?utm_content=buffer4c4ef&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

This startup will use drones to map forests and plant trees at 1/10th of
the usual cost

I, for one, welcome our treeplanting drone overlords.

An Oregon startup is working on the development of drones that can plant
and monitor trees on a large scale, using "precision forestry" and high
technology to jumpstart reforestation efforts in previously logged areas.
While the basic approach of DroneSeed isn't a novel one, the company is
looking to add a suite of forestry applications to its machines, with the
intent of bringing "full lifecycle services" to forestry management,
including mapping and monitoring, at a fraction of the cost of doing so
manually.

Mechanizing certain aspects of industry has brought huge advances in
productivity and cost reductions, such as the assembly line for
automobiles, or the tractor and harvesting machines for farming, but
DroneSeed's challenge is to apply similar automation to a decidedly
different space - not acres of flat farmland, or the carefully engineered
factory floor, but the hills, mountains, and valleys of the natural world.
But with the advancements in sensor technology, GPS positioning, and drone
components, this startup could help to bring forestry - a hugely underrated
industry, in my opinion - into the 21st century.

"Forestry is 100 years behind in its adoption of automation- trees are
harvested by massive machines, but replanted by hand and shovel. Our drones
can go where machinery can't, and plant magnitudes faster and more cheaply
than humans. DroneSeed's success means truly scalable reforestation." -
DroneSeed

According to MarketWatch, DroneSeed's co-founder and CEO Grant Canary said
that treeplanting laborers, who are responsible for planting some 1.5
billion trees each year in the US, are hard to find, not because the money
isn't there, but because it's so physically demanding. "You have people who
will turn down the jobs for lower paying easier work elsewhere. Not because
they’re lazy, but because it’s so draining. It’s one of the hardest jobs on
the planet."

But by using specialty drones, this treeplanting (or replanting of trees
that have been logged, as is usually the case) could be done in much less
time, with much less effort, and at a fraction of the cost - perhaps as low
as 1/10th of the current cost. However, DroneSeed is still in the R&D and
testing phase, so the validity of that claim remains to be seen.

Once its treeplanting technology, which is said to be "an air gun-like
system that shoots seeds into the soil at speeds on par with a BB gun," is
fully developed, DroneSeed believes that its drones could plant as many as
800 seeds per hour, compared with a human laborer planting about 800 seeds
per day. This approach could do for forestry what precision agriculture did
for food production, with the potential to increase reforestation rates and
decrease costs. In fact, Canary made a direct comparison to the ag
industry's advances with his statement that "We see drones as forestry’s
tractor."

But reforesting areas isn't only about planting more trees, or more of the
right trees, as there are significant pressures in the ecosystem that can
make growing a forest quite a challenge, such as keeping invasive weed
species that have rapid growth patterns from taking over the areas where
new trees are planted. To address that issue, DroneSeed also has an
automated answer, in the form of precision spraying, which is not exactly
inline with the general vibe of TreeHugger, but which seems to be a
necessary step in reaching the longer term goal of planting and nurturing
forests instead of massive tracts of invasive weeds.

According to Crosscut, using carefully targeted herbicides to aid the
growth of new forests can speed up the normal process of succession, which
can take a century or more in some cases, by helping to eliminate the
competition for space, light, moisture, and nutrients by other plants, in
favor of the newly planted trees.DroneSeed has been running live tests
(without using any actual herbicides) to show its potential customers, such
as forestry companies, the efficiency of the drone-based systems, and is
currently working to finalize its herbicide application permits.

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