Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art Survey

The development of robotic systems to operate in forest environments is of great relevance for the public and private sectors. In this sense, this article reviews several scientific papers, research projects and commercial products related to robotic applications for environmental preservation, moni...

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Main Authors: Luiz F. P. Oliveira, António P. Moreira, Manuel F. Silva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:Robotics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/10/2/53
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spelling doaj-235a5311bdf44d1d9b6b90bff679290b2021-03-25T00:03:57ZengMDPI AGRobotics2218-65812021-03-0110535310.3390/robotics10020053Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art SurveyLuiz F. P. Oliveira0António P. Moreira1Manuel F. Silva2Centre for Robotics in Industry and Intelligent Systems (CRIIS), INESC TEC, Rua Dr. Roberto Frias, 4200-465 Porto, PortugalCentre for Robotics in Industry and Intelligent Systems (CRIIS), INESC TEC, Rua Dr. Roberto Frias, 4200-465 Porto, PortugalCentre for Robotics in Industry and Intelligent Systems (CRIIS), INESC TEC, Rua Dr. Roberto Frias, 4200-465 Porto, PortugalThe development of robotic systems to operate in forest environments is of great relevance for the public and private sectors. In this sense, this article reviews several scientific papers, research projects and commercial products related to robotic applications for environmental preservation, monitoring, wildfire firefighting, inventory operations, planting, pruning and harvesting. After conducting critical analysis, the main characteristics observed were: (a) the locomotion system is directly affected by the type of environmental monitoring to be performed; (b) different reasons for pruning result in different locomotion and cutting systems; (c) each type of forest, in each season and each type of soil can directly interfere with the navigation technique used; and (d) the integration of the concept of swarm of robots with robots of different types of locomotion systems (land, air or sea) can compensate for the time of executing tasks in unstructured environments. Two major areas are proposed for future research works: Internet of Things (IoT)-based smart forest and navigation systems. It is expected that, with the various characteristics exposed in this paper, the current robotic forest systems will be improved, so that forest exploitation becomes more efficient and sustainable.https://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/10/2/53forest 4.0forest roboticsforest navigation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luiz F. P. Oliveira
António P. Moreira
Manuel F. Silva
spellingShingle Luiz F. P. Oliveira
António P. Moreira
Manuel F. Silva
Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art Survey
Robotics
forest 4.0
forest robotics
forest navigation
author_facet Luiz F. P. Oliveira
António P. Moreira
Manuel F. Silva
author_sort Luiz F. P. Oliveira
title Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art Survey
title_short Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art Survey
title_full Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art Survey
title_fullStr Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art Survey
title_full_unstemmed Advances in Forest Robotics: A State-of-the-Art Survey
title_sort advances in forest robotics: a state-of-the-art survey
publisher MDPI AG
series Robotics
issn 2218-6581
publishDate 2021-03-01
description The development of robotic systems to operate in forest environments is of great relevance for the public and private sectors. In this sense, this article reviews several scientific papers, research projects and commercial products related to robotic applications for environmental preservation, monitoring, wildfire firefighting, inventory operations, planting, pruning and harvesting. After conducting critical analysis, the main characteristics observed were: (a) the locomotion system is directly affected by the type of environmental monitoring to be performed; (b) different reasons for pruning result in different locomotion and cutting systems; (c) each type of forest, in each season and each type of soil can directly interfere with the navigation technique used; and (d) the integration of the concept of swarm of robots with robots of different types of locomotion systems (land, air or sea) can compensate for the time of executing tasks in unstructured environments. Two major areas are proposed for future research works: Internet of Things (IoT)-based smart forest and navigation systems. It is expected that, with the various characteristics exposed in this paper, the current robotic forest systems will be improved, so that forest exploitation becomes more efficient and sustainable.
topic forest 4.0
forest robotics
forest navigation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/10/2/53
work_keys_str_mv AT luizfpoliveira advancesinforestroboticsastateoftheartsurvey
AT antoniopmoreira advancesinforestroboticsastateoftheartsurvey
AT manuelfsilva advancesinforestroboticsastateoftheartsurvey
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