Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to illustrate the growing role of robots in environmental monitoring.Design/methodology/approachFollowing an introduction, this first considers aerial robots for monitoring atmospheric pollution. It then discusses the role of aerial, surface and underwater robots to monitor aquatic environments. Some examples are then provided of the robotic monitoring of the terrestrial environment, and finally, brief conclusions are drawn.FindingsRobots are playing an important role in numerous environmental monitoring applications and have overcome many of the limitations of traditional methodologies. They operate in all media and frequently provide data with enhanced spatial and temporal coverage. In addition to detecting pollution and characterising environmental conditions, they can assist in locating illicit activities. Drones have benefited from the availability of small and lightweight imaging devices and sensors that can detect airborne pollutants and also characterise certain features of aquatic and terrestrial environments. As with other robotic applications, environmental drone imagery is benefiting from the use of AI techniques. Ranging from short-term local deployments to extended-duration oceanic missions, aquatic robots are increasingly being used to monitor and characterise freshwater and marine environments.Originality/valueThis provides a detailed insight into the growing number of ways that robots are being used to monitor the environment.

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