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Robotics Python

Florida Deploys Robot Rabbits To Control Invasive Burmese Python Population (cbsnews.com) 62

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CBS News: They look, move and even smell like the kind of furry Everglades marsh rabbit a Burmese python would love to eat. But these bunnies are robots meant to lure the giant invasive snakes out of their hiding spots. It's the latest effort by the South Florida Water Management District to eliminate as many pythons as possible from the Everglades, where they are decimating native species with their voracious appetites. In Everglades National Park, officials say the snakes have eliminated 95% of small mammals as well as thousands of birds. "Removing them is fairly simple. It's detection. We're having a really hard time finding them," said Mike Kirkland, lead invasive animal biologist for the water district. "They're so well camouflaged in the field."

The water district and University of Florida researchers deployed 120 robot rabbits this summer as an experiment. Previously, there was an effort to use live rabbits as snake lures but that became too expensive and time-consuming, Kirkland said. The robots are simple toy rabbits, but retrofitted to emit heat, a smell and to make natural movements to appear like any other regular rabbit. "They look like a real rabbit," Kirkland said. They are solar powered and can be switched on and off remotely. They are placed in small pens monitored by a video camera that sends out a signal when a python is nearby. "Then I can deploy one of our many contractors to go out and remove the python," Kirkland said. The total cost per robot rabbit is about $4,000, financed by the water district, he added.

Florida Deploys Robot Rabbits To Control Invasive Burmese Python Population

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  • use live rabbits as snake lures but that became too expensive
    .
    .
    The total cost per robot rabbit is about $4,000

    Live rabbits are more expensive? Acquisition cost should be nearly nil, since live rabbits breed like ... well, rabbits.

    • How many snakes can a live rabbit find in the wild before its eaten ?? How often do the live rabbits need to be fed or monitored ?? As the video in the linked article shows, these robotic rabbits are in a cage off the ground with a solar collector. The snake will only see the heat emitted by the toy bunny. And automatically sends a message to a snake wrangler. And I am sure the company that designed and built this tried this many time to get it where it is today.

      I would guess technology is not your thing.

      • The setup was pretty much the same for live rabbits - they were kept in cages that the boas couldn't reach. But it was a much larger setup. A bigger cage, water bottle, feeder, it was like six times the size of the pictured toy one.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          The setup was pretty much the same for live rabbits - they were kept in cages that the boas couldn't reach. But it was a much larger setup. A bigger cage, water bottle, feeder, it was like six times the size of the pictured toy one.

          This seems like a very expensive approach because of the need for human intervention.

          I think it might better to allow the snake to swallow it, and design it to recognize when it is inside a snake, and deploy a buzz saw and cut its way back out to kill again. As long as you make sure it emits noise that would scare away any toddlers, speaks a warning message for their parents, and waits until it has been thoroughly ingested for ten minutes or so before cutting its way out, assuming an adequate power supply,

          • such a device could potentially stay in the field for days or weeks at a time, killing snake after snake without mercy

            And then next we'll have Screamers [wikipedia.org] going around the place.

    • Re:More expensive? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Friday August 29, 2025 @12:06AM (#65623392) Homepage Journal

      As noted by others, it's not the acquisition costs that kill, it's the maintenance. Rabbit feed, water, medical, cages, cleaning, etc...

      The robot rabbits can be scented from a bottle, the solar panel and a battery keep it emitting heat visible to the snakes (which can see into the infrared), and attract them that way. No more need to carry around feed, water, and replacement rabbits. The robot rabbits can presumably be left in place for longer periods without maintenance.

      • As noted by others, it's not the acquisition costs that kill, it's the maintenance. Rabbit feed, water, medical, cages, cleaning, etc...

        The robot rabbits can be scented from a bottle, the solar panel and a battery keep it emitting heat visible to the snakes (which can see into the infrared), and attract them that way. No more need to carry around feed, water, and replacement rabbits. The robot rabbits can presumably be left in place for longer periods without maintenance.

        You're still paying humans behind the scene because the rabbits are nothing more than electronic bait. Screw that waste too.

        Fill the rabbits with either a deadly neurotoxin (if snakes are trying to eat them), or fill them with 250,000 volts of tasing power. Along with a webcam of course. The PPV revenue would more than pay for more rabbits, along with the satellite uplinks and WiFi in the everglades.

        We're not catching the damn things for trophies. Kill them where they lay before someone suggests drone c

        • "neurotoxin?" How about just bust out of the snake like furry Xenomorphs, do a wet-dog shake, walk 10 feet east, and start virtual foraging again.
    • Re:More expensive? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Friday August 29, 2025 @02:09AM (#65623546)

      The other danger I presume is replacing a snake infestation with a rabbit infestation.

      That said, Get really cheap fake rabbits that function as IEDs. Or coat the expensive ones with a durable poison.

      Though I suppose you dont really want to poison the aligators.

      • The other danger I presume is replacing a snake infestation with a rabbit infestation.

        Ding ding ding! We have a winner! The last thing you want to do is replace a snake infestation with a rabbit infestation [wikipedia.org] - as the Australians discovered the hard way in the late 1800's to early 1900's. The winning feature of robot rabbits is that you can turn them off when you're done with them, or at the very least they'll run out of batteries, despite what certain commercial battery brands might want you to believe.

      • Re:More expensive? (Score:5, Informative)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday August 29, 2025 @05:42AM (#65623762)

        The other danger I presume is replacing a snake infestation with a rabbit infestation.

        Rabbits are a native species in the Everglades.

        Marsh rabbits [wikipedia.org]

        • The other danger I presume is replacing a snake infestation with a rabbit infestation.

          Rabbits are a native species in the Everglades.

          Marsh rabbits [wikipedia.org]

          Rabbits were a native species in the Everglades.

          Their numbers now represent damn near extinction in the area.

          • by dargaud ( 518470 )
            I'm surprised anything can manage to bring rabbits to near extinction. Those things breed like... rabbits !
      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        The other danger I presume is replacing a snake infestation with a rabbit infestation.

        That said, Get really cheap fake rabbits that function as IEDs. Or coat the expensive ones with a durable poison.

        Though I suppose you dont really want to poison the aligators.

        Lets face it if a robot is going to start replicating uncontrollably it's going to be a robot bunny.

        Cyberdyne systems model Fluffy-808.

      • Yeah I think Australia would have a few things to say about that!
  • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Thursday August 28, 2025 @11:44PM (#65623356) Homepage

    Previously, there was an effort to use live rabbits as snake lures but that became too expensive and time-consuming, Kirkland said. ... The total cost per robot rabbit is about $4,000, financed by the water district, he added.

    More expensive than $4k each!? Were they buying their live rabbits from a Ferengi?

    Also, note to the /. editors, the story icon is cute, but Florida does not have a problem with invasive Python scripts.

    • LOL, I didn't even notice till you mention this. Thanks for a good laugh.

    • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Friday August 29, 2025 @12:14AM (#65623414) Homepage Journal

      Figure 1 hour/day maintenance at $30/hour per live rabbit sensor/trap. That's $11k/year. While 1 hour might be excessive for actual labor, figure in the time to actually REACH the traps, which are going to be located in fairly remote spots.
      Minimum wage in Florida is $14/hour and going to $15/hour. It's pretty standard to figure that actual employment costs run double once you introduce taxes, benefits, insurance, education, vacation, and everything else.
      In this case, the office is likely a 'rough terrain' vehicle.
      All expensive.

      Oh, and the $4k is probably for the complete setup, which means that even a "cheap" live rabbit setup runs like $2k for the cameras and data uplink.

    • by theCoder ( 23772 )

      ... Florida does not have a problem with invasive Python scripts.

      As a software developer in Florida, I can tell you that Python scripts are definitely invasive. Twenty years ago, there were practically none, and now they are all over the place! They gobble up precious white space and unused braces just fall from the brace trees to rot, uneaten. They've driven cute, innocent Perl and shell scripts almost to extinction! It's quite a problem almost no one is talking about...

    • Wabbit Season!

      Seriously. This is the South. Put a bounty on these things, with no bag limit, and local hunters will pursue them to extinction. Get the major cowboy boot companies to chip in with all skins going to them for their "Florida Man" production line. Compensation can be a little cash and free boots for yourself and the wife. And all that snake meat will surely be good for something. In 5 seasons, they'll declare a snake genocide.

    • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

      /. used to have a Monty Python rabbit icon. Wonder why that wasn't used.

  • I keep reading WABBIT in the article
  • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Friday August 29, 2025 @12:17AM (#65623418)

    They should have used the Rabbit of Caerbannog, well know to be deadly to Pythons.

     

  • I'd like to build Rev 2, where the rabbit kills the snake. I'm thinking $12000 each seems fair.

  • The snakes will evolve to detect and avoid these by various mannerism or appearance.

  • by bleedingobvious ( 6265230 ) on Friday August 29, 2025 @04:34AM (#65623712)

    Headline a few weeks from now...

    FLORIDA MAN FOUND DEAD AFTER SEXUALLY ASSAULTING A ROBOT BUNNY

    He's not the super hero we need, but the one we deserve.

    • Headline a few weeks from now...

      FLORIDA MAN FOUND DEAD AFTER SEXUALLY ASSAULTING A ROBOT BUNNY

      He's not the super hero we need, but the one we deserve.

      I hear ya, but I'm having a hard time envisioning it. Someone hold my beer and pass me that satellite uplink for the PPV feed. We'll need funding for this.

      - Dr. Florida Man, Chief Pervatologist

  • I could see this tech evolving to catch man eaters or even human sexual predators.

  • It was bound to happen in some form.

    Nice to see it became robo-rabbits.

  • Instead of alerting someone to send out a snake-killing contractor, just have some spikes pop out of the robobunny when it detects it is being eaten?
    • Make it just like the killer rabbit guarding the Cave of Caerbannog in Monty Python's The Holy Grail? How does a killer robot know it's being eaten by a snake, and not something else... like a human?
  • It costs $4k? Wow!

    It looks like there's a rod attached to the 'rabbit' that probably jiggles it around some periodically. Probably some kind of motion detector that triggers when the snake climbs up to the pen. A cellphone module that sends the alert (and for that money there better be a photo of the snake). I'm figuring less than $500 in parts.

  • From Adult Swim
  • That brings up the possibility of a whole new market for those sex bots they are currently working on! Bait bots!

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