Bumblebee: A Path Towards Fully Autonomous Robotic Vine Pruning
Dormant season grapevine pruning requires skilled seasonal workers during the winter season which are becoming less available. As workers hasten to prune more vines in less time amid to the short-term seasonal hiring culture and low wages, vines are often pruned inconsistently leading to imbalanced...
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Zusammenfassung: | Dormant season grapevine pruning requires skilled seasonal workers during the
winter season which are becoming less available. As workers hasten to prune
more vines in less time amid to the short-term seasonal hiring culture and low
wages, vines are often pruned inconsistently leading to imbalanced grapevines.
In addition to this, currently existing mechanical methods cannot selectively
prune grapevines and manual follow-up operations are often required that
further increase production cost. In this paper, we present the design and
field evaluation of a rugged, and fully autonomous robot for end-to-end pruning
of dormant season grapevines. The proposed design incorporates novel camera
systems, a kinematically redundant manipulator, a ground robot, and novel
algorithms in the perception system. The presented research prototype robot
system was able to spur prune a row of vines from both sides completely in 213
sec/vine with a total pruning accuracy of 87%. Initial field tests of the
autonomous system in a commercial vineyard have shown significant variability
reduction in dormant season pruning when compared to mechanical pre-pruning
trials. The design approach, system components, lessons learned, future
enhancements as well as a brief economic analysis are described in the
manuscript. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2112.00291 |