(Press-News.org) In a Policy Forum, Ben Belton and colleagues discuss the rapidly growing use of drone technology in agricultural applications and the important, yet understudied, benefits and trade-offs involved. “There are strong indications that drones can raise the efficiency and productivity of farming, improve worker safety, and enhance rural livelihoods, but these impacts have yet to be evaluated rigorously,” Belton et al. write. “Applied interdisciplinary research and corresponding policy responses are urgently needed to steer the global drone revolution in ways that make agriculture more sustainable.” Over the past decade, drones have become a profoundly transformative technology. Of their many uses, agriculture has emerged as one of the most significant and fastest-growing domains, particularly in Asia and Latin America. On farms worldwide, drones now undertake tasks ranging from sowing seeds and distributing fertilizers to monitoring crops, surveying livestock, and most prominently, spraying pesticides and other agrochemicals. As such, its thought that drones may help solve the challenge of producing more food with fewer resources. According to Belton et al. drones could enhance farming sustainability by boosting yields, reducing waste, and lowering chemical exposure, while also creating new opportunities for rural livelihoods—though risks of labor displacement, gender inequality, and chemical drift remain. To maximize benefits and manage these challenges, governments should support inclusive adoption through financing, training, and smart regulation. They should invest in research and infrastructure, say the authors, and establish safeguards on labor transitions, environmental safety, and data sovereignty, ensuring drones advance both sustainability and equity.
END
The promise and tradeoffs of the 'drone revolution' in modern agriculture
Summary author: Walter Beckwith
2025-09-04
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Neutrophils 'perforate' heart cells to promote arrhythmia after heart attacks
2025-09-04
Following injury from a heart attack, immune cells called neutrophils release a peptide that punctures stressed heart cells and destabilizes their electrical activity. This triggers life-threatening arrhythmias. These findings offer a novel explanation – and potential therapeutic target – for these deadly cardiac events. Ischemic heart disease – cardiac damage caused by narrowed coronary arteries – is among the leading causes of death worldwide. It can lead to heart attacks and sudden cardiac death. When a coronary ...
AI model reveals hidden earthquake swarms and faults in Italy’s Campi Flegrei
2025-09-04
Scientists are using artificial intelligence to understand escalating unrest in Italy’s Campi Flegrei, a volcanic area that is home to hundreds of thousands of people.
Like adjusting a camera lens so a blurry image becomes clear, the new approach makes it possible for researchers to identify earthquakes that previous tools could not pick out from massive sets of seismic monitoring data.
The research, a collaboration between Stanford University, Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) - Osservatorio Vesuviano, and ...
International research team unlocks the power of passivation for perovskite silicon tandem solar cells
2025-09-04
An international research team of photovoltaics scientists has taken a crucial step toward the industrialization of perovskite silicon tandem solar cells. They demonstrated that passivation of the perovskite top cell is possible in combination with textured silicon bottom cells featuring large pyramid size, which are the current industry standard for solar cells. Additionally, they discovered that the passivation affects the entire perovskite layer—unlike silicon, where surface treatment only influences the upper layers—leading to further efficiency improvements. The researchers from King Abdullah University of Science and ...
Human impact on the ocean will double by 2050, UCSB scientists warn
2025-09-04
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — The seas have long sustained human life, but a new UC Santa Barbara study shows that rising climate and human pressures are pushing the oceans toward a dangerous threshold.
Vast and powerful, the oceans can seem limitless in their abundance and impervious to disturbances. For millennia, humans have supported their lives, livelihoods and lifestyles with the ocean, relying on its diverse ecosystems for food and material, but also for recreation, business, wellness and tourism.
Yet the future of our oceans is worrying, ...
Politecnico di Milano wins two ERC starting grants
2025-09-04
Improving living conditions for Parkinson's patients, and diagnoses for patients suffering from inflammatory processes. The medical field is the common factor in these Politecnico di Milano research projects, which have been awarded two ERC (European Research Council) Starting Grants with a funding of 1.5 million each, for a duration of five years. The prestigious awards were won by researchers Emanuele Riva from the Department of Mechanical Engineering with the LUMEN project and Claudio Conci from the Department of Chemistry, Materials, and Chemical Engineering “Giulio Natta” with the ALFRED project. ...
ERC awards €761M to the next generation of scientists in Europe
2025-09-04
Ekaterina Zaharieva, European Commissioner for Startups, Research and Innovation, said:
‘Among the winners in this new round of EU funding are researchers of 51 nationalities. They will be advancing knowledge across a wide range of scientific fields, including cancer, mental health and quantum science. We see leading scientists coming to Europe with these new grants, and many choosing to remain here thanks to this support. This demonstrates Europe’s potential to attract and keep top scientific talent.’ ...
U-M awarded $15 million NSF grant to transform the science of natural hazards
2025-09-04
ANN ARBOR—The University of Michigan, in collaboration with more than a dozen academic, governmental and community partners across the country, will launch the Center for Land Surface Hazards.
CLaSH is a new center aimed at advancing research on the fundamental science processes that cause landsliding, river erosion, debris flows and flooding.
When hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes or other natural disasters tear through communities, the change they wreak upon the landscape can trigger other disastrous events such as landslides and flooding. But it has been difficult to predict how these events connect to ...
Acid-resistant artificial mucus improves gastric wound healing in animals
2025-09-04
Hydrogels—materials like gelatin that can absorb and hold water—can aid wound healing and enable slow-release drug delivery, but they usually break down in acidic environments like the stomach. Inspired by the properties of gastric mucus, a team of researchers and clinicians led by Zuankai Wang of Hong Kong Polytechnic University have developed an acid-resistant hydrogel called “ultrastable mucus-inspired hydrogel” (UMIH). Publishing September 4 in the Cell Press journal Cell Reports Physical Science, ...
Spaceflight accelerates human stem cell aging, UC San Diego researchers find
2025-09-04
Researchers from University of California San Diego Sanford Stem Cell Institute have discovered that spaceflight accelerates the aging of human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), which are vital for blood and immune system health. In a study published in Cell Stem Cell, the team used automated artificial intelligence (AI)-driven stem cell-tracking nanobioreactor systems in four SpaceX Commercial Resupply Services missions to the International Space Station (ISS) to track stem cell changes in real time. The findings show that the cells lost some of their ability to make healthy new cells, became more prone to DNA damage and showed signs of faster aging ...
Single treatment with MM120 (lysergide) in generalized anxiety disorder
2025-09-04
About The Study: In participants with moderate to severe generalized anxiety disorder, a single dose of MM120 (lysergide D-tartrate) produced a dose-dependent reduction in anxiety. Lysergide, or lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), is a semisynthetic psychedelic drug. An oral pharmaceutical formulation of LSD is MM120. These results support the dose-dependent efficacy of MM120 and inform the dose selection for phase 3 pivotal trials.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Daniel R. Karlin, MD, MA, email medaffairs@mindmed.co.
To ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
This common fish has an uncommon feature: Forehead teeth, used for mating
UI Health performs first islet cell transplant with Lantidra
Study shows not all dietary proteins are digested the same way
MSU study finds accessible wireless ultrasounds are accurate
Scientists review breakthrough methods to disrupt toxic “forever chemicals” in water
Ghost sharks grow forehead teeth to help them have sex
How stress and social struggles fuel America’s obesity crisis
Researchers uncover similarities between human and AI learning
Researchers achieve light-induced heterolytic hydrogen dissociation at ambient temperature
Intestinal surface cells pull rather than push
Game-changing biotech for engineering pathogen-resistant crops
Evolution of rodents’ unique thumbnail contributed to their successful radiation
Estrogen-driven cell regeneration shields female kidneys from disease
Artificial intelligence helps boost LIGO
The promise and tradeoffs of the 'drone revolution' in modern agriculture
Neutrophils 'perforate' heart cells to promote arrhythmia after heart attacks
AI model reveals hidden earthquake swarms and faults in Italy’s Campi Flegrei
International research team unlocks the power of passivation for perovskite silicon tandem solar cells
Human impact on the ocean will double by 2050, UCSB scientists warn
Politecnico di Milano wins two ERC starting grants
ERC awards €761M to the next generation of scientists in Europe
U-M awarded $15 million NSF grant to transform the science of natural hazards
Acid-resistant artificial mucus improves gastric wound healing in animals
Spaceflight accelerates human stem cell aging, UC San Diego researchers find
Single treatment with MM120 (lysergide) in generalized anxiety disorder
Telephone vs text message counseling and physical activity among midlife and older adults
Students with overprotective parents are more vulnerable to anxiety during their transition to university, researchers find
Seagrass as a carbon sponge?
Study shows how smoking drives pancreatic cancer
Unveiling the identity of Crohn's disease T cells
[Press-News.org] The promise and tradeoffs of the 'drone revolution' in modern agricultureSummary author: Walter Beckwith