4.6 Article

An Opto-Electronic Sensor-Ring to Detect Arthropods of Significantly Different Body Sizes

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s20040982

Keywords

insect detection; infrared sensor; environmental monitoring; integrated pest management; microarthropods; Collembola; Oribatida; Acari

Funding

  1. European Union's LIFE project [LIFE13ENV/HU/001092]
  2. Hungarian TALAJBIOM project [GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00056]
  3. Premium Postdoctoral Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences [PPD2018-001/2018]
  4. Higher Education Excellence Program of the Ministry of Human Capacities of the Budapest University of Technology and Economics (BME FIKP-VIZ)
  5. National Research, Development and Innovation Fund [TUDFO/51757/2019-ITM]

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Arthropods, including pollinators and pests, have high positive and negative impacts on human well-being and the economy, and there is an increasing need to monitor their activity and population growth. The monitoring of arthropod species is a time-consuming and financially demanding process. Automatic detection can be a solution to this problem. Here, we describe the setup and operation mechanism of an infrared opto-electronic sensor-ring, which can be used for both small and large arthropods. The sensor-ring consists of 16 infrared (IR) photodiodes along a semicircle in front of an infrared LED. Using 3D printing, we constructed two types of sensor-ring: one with a wider sensing field for detection of large arthropods (flying, crawling, surface-living) in the size range of 2-35 mm; and another one with a narrower sensing field for soil microarthropods in the size range of 0.1-2 mm. We examined the detection accuracy and reliability of the two types of sensor-ring in the laboratory by using particles, and dead and living arthropods at two different sensitivity levels. For the wider sensor-ring, the 95% detectability level was reached with grain particles of 0.9 mm size. This result allowed us to detect all of the macroarthropods that were applied in the tests and that might be encountered in pest management. In the case of living microarthropods with different colors and shapes, when we used the narrower sensor-ring, we achieved the 95% detectability level at 1.1 mm, 0.9 mm, and 0.5 mm in the cases of F. candida, H. nitidus, and H. aculeifer, respectively. The unique potential of arthropod-detecting sensors lies in their real-time measurement system; the data are automatically forwarded to the server, and the end-user receives pest abundance data daily or even immediately. This technological innovation will allow us to make pest management more effective.

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