Popular Mechanics South Africa

BIG DATA FOR BEES

WE HAVE A SERIOUS PROBLEM – bees are dying off. Beekeepers are struggling to keep their hives healthy and thriving. In fact, more than 40 per cent of bee colonies are being lost each year in the US, a mysterious phenomenon scientists are calling colony collapse disorder. Bees are vital for most of the food that we eat. A world without bees could affect a third of the world’s crops, putting the global economy into disarray.

‘One in every three bites of food we take on any given day was probably helped along by a bee somewhere,’ says Jon Hoekstra of the World Wildlife Fund. Luckily, there’s a lot of buzz around innovative technology such as sensors, artificial intelligence, machine learning and big data that could bring us closer to exploring and understanding bee health.

One exciting project is The World Bee Project’s Global Hive Network (GHN), the first globally coordinated honeybee monitoring programme. The hives have sensors that collect data such as ambient temperature (outside of the hive), brood temperature (around the frame in the hive where the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Popular Mechanics South Africa

Popular Mechanics South Africa4 min readSecurity
Quantum Cyberattacks Are Coming. This Maths Can Stop Them
ENCRYPTION – THE PROCESS OF SENDING A scrambled message that only the intended recipient’s device can decode – allows private and public sectors alike to safeguard information. Traditional encryption uses schemes based on complex mathematics such as
Popular Mechanics South Africa10 min read
6 Metre Waves. All Engines On Fire. 1 500 Km From Land.
Eric Lindner’s book Tiger in the Sea: The Ditching of Flying Tiger 923 and the Desperate Struggle for Survival tells the story of pilot John Murray’s 1962 lifesaving ‘ditch’ of an L-1049H Super Constellation in the North Atlantic Ocean. The barely co
Popular Mechanics South Africa2 min read
How To Buy Your Own Unique Property
A report from the analytics company GeoTab counts more than 3 800 ghost towns still standing in America. But they don’t usually receive much attention when they hit the market, says Underwood. Weird property news generally travels fastest by word of

Related