CHUALAR, Calif. – Looking like the ungainly combination of a Transformer and Edward Scissorhands, the robot slowly trundles across the field of tiny plants. It uses three high-resolution cameras to peer down at the ground below. 

Lit by synchronized strobe lights, an onboard computer creates a digital image of each seedling as it glides by, comparing them with all the greenery it might reasonably find in a field of rich Salinas valley farmland two hours south of San Francisco.  

In a fraction of a second, there’s a match – broccoli – and the computer hones in on the exact center of the plant, creating an on-the-fly chart of its placement.  

“It puts a dot on the stem and maps around it,” says Todd Rinkenberger of FarmWise, the robot’s maker. “Now it knows what’s plant. Everything else is a weed.” 

The robot’s circular set of metal blades smoothly move so they’re right in front of the plant, then snick open and shut, precisely digging into the soil one on each side of the broccoli seedling, destroying the weeds while leaving the sprout untouched, ready to grow to harvest size in another month or so. 

AGRICULTURE:Ancient farming practice makes a comeback as climate change puts pressure on crops

CLIMATE CHANGE:Weird weather hit cattle ranchers and citrus growers in 2022. Why it likely will get worse.

This all happens in a fraction of a second as the FarmWise Titan robot rolls down the field at less than one mile an hour.