logo
Shoe-box sized device helps growers detect diseases

Shoe-box sized device helps growers detect diseases

RNZ News6 hours ago
The two-year trial at Pukekohe involving BioScout units aims to help growers make better disease management decisions.
Photo:
Supplied
A new device is helping growers detect diseases out of thin air.
The two-year trial at Pukekohe involving BioScout units aims to help growers make better disease management decisions.
Three of the shoe box-sized units have been set up by Te Ahikawariki Vegetable Industry Centre of Excellence (VICE) with support from Vegetables New Zealand Inc, Onions NZ and Potatoes New Zealand.
They sit upon a stand and are powered by solar panels. A small intake on the front of the machine collects air samples which pass over a bit of tape.
Daniel Sutton, research development and extension manager for Vegetables New Zealand, explained a microscopic camera take images of the particles - such as pollen or fungal spores - which are stuck to the tape and then analysed by artificial intelligence to see if they carry disease.
"What we're doing is using this tool to evaluate the amount of disease spores in the air and we're looking at ground truthing that in terms of the range of different vegetable crops that we grow in the area - potatoes, onions, lettuce, brassicas, carrots and the like," Sutton said. "We're trying to evaluate what we're seeing in the machine versus what we're seeing in the crop."
Sutton said this tool would help "fill in the gap" around the pathogen and provide a continual flow of information of what disease is around and how much of it.
"Disease infection 101 is you need a susceptible host, you need the environment to be favourable for the disease to infect and you need the pathogen to be present."
He said it will help them identify some of the "big" diseases like target spot in potatoes and white mould in carrots.
It was an "exciting" example of how technology was helping the sector.
Sutton said, if they worked as expected, the hope was to establish a network of such BioScout units across major vegetable growing regions in the country.
There are about 20 such units across the country, with arable farmers and grape growers having also adopted the tech.
"If they can all talk and connect to one another than we'd actually have a nationwide network looking for these key diseases for us."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scientists monitor cluster of earthquakes in lower North Island
Scientists monitor cluster of earthquakes in lower North Island

RNZ News

time44 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

Scientists monitor cluster of earthquakes in lower North Island

Earth Sciences say they are monitoring a cluster of earthquakes centred off the east coast of the lower North Island this week. At least 34 quakes have been recorded west of Castlepoint in the last seven days - with the strongest measuring a magnitude of 4.2 in the early hours of Monday morning. Photo: GeoNet At least 34 quakes have been recorded west of Castlepoint in the last seven days - with the strongest measuring a magnitude of 4.2 - at depths of about 20 kilometres. On-call seismologist Sam Taylor-Offord said a concentrated sequence events typically indicated a "much more intense" process than the usual background noise of seismic activity. "You can think about it as something that is unfolding. It's a process. "Every earthquake pushes a little bit of the stress that releases into the area around it and then that can create a cascade of increasing the stress in the rock surrounding it. That rock breaks - it increases the stress in the rock around it - that rock breaks and that's your sequence playing out," Taylor-Offord said. But he said - along the line of subducting tectonic plates which characterised the fault along the east coast of the North Island - the quakes could also be associated with multiple "slow slip" events. Subduction was the process where one tectonic plate was forced beneath another into the Earth's mantle. "If you think of it as a very large earthquake that's happening but it's happening over weeks and months. "It's still changing the stress in the surrounding area and in some places the earth breaks in a related way to that movement. That tends to break in a sequence. So that's one of the things that might be happening," Taylor-Offord said. Taylor-Offord said the agency was looking into the pattern but it did not necessarily indicate an increased risk of a large quake in the area. "Sometimes a sequence will precede a larger earthquake, sometimes nothing will come of it. Science is not quite at the point where we can say 'that one, not that one'," he said. He said - on the flip side - it was not possible to infer that a quake cluster was indicating a gradual release of pressure which could ward off a larger quake. "We have earthquakes like this all the time and - so far - they haven't stopped the larger earthquake coming. "Perhaps a weaker fault [is] breaking but elsewhere there is a strong fault that is still accumulating that stress and will someday rupture in an earthquake. It's a fact of life," Taylor-Offord said. He said the agency was also monitoring another cluster of just under 30 weak quakes centred south east of Seddon over the last month. He said those quakes were more likely to be the remnants of aftershock sequences from the 2016 Kaikōura quake which was centred nearby. Taylor-Offord said the activity was a reminder for people to stay prepared for a major event. "Small earthquakes are good because they remind us that bigger quakes are possible. These are regions very close to the plate boundary where we have a lot of stress and a lot of strain and we expect large earthquakes in the future as we have seen in the past," Taylor-Offord said.

Two-month-old Bellamere Arwyn Duncan's death 'must be a turning point', says pharmacist
Two-month-old Bellamere Arwyn Duncan's death 'must be a turning point', says pharmacist

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Two-month-old Bellamere Arwyn Duncan's death 'must be a turning point', says pharmacist

Bellamere Duncan died at Starship Hospital on 19 July. Photo: Supplied The death of a two-month-old baby who died after being given medication that was more than 13 times the prescribed dose is a "symptom of a much deeper, systemic issue," a member of the national executive of the Pharmaceutical Society says. RNZ earlier revealed Bellamere Arwyn Duncan died at Starship Hospital on 19 July. A Manawatū pharmacy dispensed an adult dosage of phosphate to the two-month-old's parents. A provisional post mortem report said she died from phosphate toxicity. The revelations have prompted the Ministry of Health and Health New Zealand to "urgently" undertake a joint review into the incident with MedSafe visiting the pharmacy to ensure it was safe to continue operating. The Pharmacy Council, which is also investigating, said it was "clear that an awful error has occurred". On Friday, the owner of the pharmacy emailed Bellamere's parents and told them an intern pharmacist misread the prescribed dosage of medication. Afterwards, a trainee technician, who was handling a phosphate product for the first time, did not notice the dosage error. Then a registered pharmacist who carried out the final check did not pick up that the prescription was for an infant and that it was new medication. The intern pharmacist has since been suspended, and the registered pharmacist has resigned. Do you know more? Email Lanny Wong a pharmacist, director of Mangawhai Pharmacy and a member of the national executive of the Pharmaceutical Society, told RNZ on Tuesday Bellamere's death was "not simply a one-off mistake". "It's a symptom of a much deeper, systemic issue. The current model prioritises volume over value, this incentivises speed at the expense of safety. "For years, community pharmacies have grappled with operating under this fundamentally flawed funding system, marked by chronic underinvestment and relentless workload pressures. Skilled staff are increasingly difficult to retain, and experienced pharmacists are burning out or leaving the profession altogether. The very people relied upon to be the final checkpoint before a medicine reaches a patient are now overstretched, under-resourced, and unsupported." CAPTION: Bellamere Duncan's parents were given an adult dosage of phosphate by the pharmacy. Photo: Supplied Wong said in healthcare there were multiple layers of safeguards that were meant to save an error from happening. "But when there are gaps in every layer, caused by workload pressures, fatigue, underinvestment or broken systems and those gaps align, the error breaks through." Pharmacists were being asked to interpret complex prescriptions, perform clinical calculations, and provide personalised counselling, often while working under intense pressure and tight deadlines, she said. "In Bellamere's case, it appears the pharmacist had to calculate a specialised paediatric dose and explain a precise paediatric-dosing schedule to the whānau. This is work that requires expertise, care, and time, and yet the pharmacy was reimbursed less than the cost of a cup of coffee. That's not just unsustainable. It's unsafe." She said Bellamere's death "must be a turning point". "It's not just about fixing one pharmacy or one process, it's about fixing the system around pharmacy. "That means investing in safety, funding time to think, check and counsel, and designing a workforce strategy that ensures every community has access to skilled, supported pharmacists." [h ]The medication error In their email to Bellamere's parents the owner of the Manawatū Pharmacy included a summary of what happened. The owner said the pharmacy's standard dispensing process involved intern pharmacists entering each prescription into the dispensary computer. The pharmacy used a dispensing system called Toniq. A technician would then use the information in Toniq and the prescription to identify the medication and put the correct amounts in containers. The labels were then printed out and placed in a basket with the original prescription and the medication. A registered pharmacist would then check the prescription, the labels and the medication itself before it was given to the patient. The owner said the pharmacy received the prescription by email on 1 July from Palmerston North Hospital. The prescription was entered into Toniq by an intern pharmacist. "This person unfortunately misread the prescribed dosage and entered the prescription dose as '1 tablet twice daily' rather than '1.2 mmol twice daily'," the owner said. The Toniq system then generated an original label for the prescription. "This includes a warning label with the patient's age, if they are under 18 years old, and if the patient has not been prescribed the medication before. "The second warning prompts the checking pharmacist to counsel (speak with) the patient or their caregiver about how to take the medication." The product was supplied in tubes of 20 tablets. The trainee technician printed out three further labels. They were to be placed on the three tubes that were being dispensed. "This was the trainee technician's first time handling a phosphate product. She was also unfamiliar with the mmol dosage. She did not notice the dosage error as a result. She put the original prescription, labels and the medication in a basket on the dispensing bench for the registered pharmacist to check. "Unfortunately, the original label and the warning label was not kept with other items." The registered pharmacist who carried out the final check did not pick up that the medication was for an infant, the owner said. "In addition, it was not identified that this was a new medication. The fact that the warning label was not retained contributed to this error." The owner said the intern pharmacist had been suspended by the Pharmacy Council. The registered pharmacist had taken leave and then resigned. "This person does not intend to return to work in the immediate future," the owner said. The pharmacy was "urgently re-evaluating our dispensing and checking protocols and reinforcing safety checks at every stage". "We are actively recruiting additional staff to help manage our workloads. In addition, we are engaging an independent pharmacist from outside the Manawatū region to conduct a full review of our dispensing procedures and provide further guidance on system improvements." The owner said the pharmacy was "fully co-operating" with investigations being carried out by MedSafe, the Pharmacy Council and the police on behalf of the coroner. The owner signed off the email with "heartfelt apologies and regret". Bellamere's parents Tempest Puklowski and Tristan Duncan said after reading the email they did not blame the intern pharmacist for what happened. "My first initial reaction after reading it was I felt really bad for the intern," Puklowski said. "I don't blame him for the mistakes. I blame whoever was meant to be looking over his shoulder, whoever put him in that responsibility and just left him to it." Puklowski said it should have been picked up that the medication was for a baby. "It just seems like there's something lacking there that could have avoided it being missed or messed up," she said. Duncan said the system "needs to be better". Tempest said she remained "frustrated and angry" about her daughter's death. "It's just an endless sort of questioning of how and where it went wrong, to the point of, yeah, how could it have been avoided? "Obviously, those questions don't do much now, which then brings on the sadness of just knowing that she could still be here if these things were pulled up on initially, if maybe the intern wasn't left just to do the job by themselves. Or if you know something else is put in place, we would've never even gotten it and then we wouldn't be beating ourselves up for giving it to her." Duncan said the past two weeks since Bellamere's death had been "really hard". "Just empty is the only word that really comes to mind," he said. "It's unfair. Just stolen away by a singular document. That's what it comes down to." Puklowski said the couple "don't really know what to do with ourselves really". They were now waiting to see what happened with the multiple investigations that are under way. "I want things to change," Duncan said.

Dire need for AI support in primary, intermediate schools survey shows
Dire need for AI support in primary, intermediate schools survey shows

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Dire need for AI support in primary, intermediate schools survey shows

A NZ Council for Education Research survey of teachers and students found that there was "a dire need" for guidance on best practice for AI in schools. Photo: UnSplash/ Taylor Flowe Primary school children say using AI sometimes feels like cheating and teachers warn their "Luddite" colleagues are "freaking out" about the technology. The insights come from an NZ Council for Education Research survey that warns primary and intermediate schools need urgent support for using Artificial Intelligence in the classroom. The council said its survey of 266 teachers and 147 pupils showed "a dire need" for guidance on best practice. It found teachers were experimenting with generative AI tools such as ChatGPT for tasks like lesson planning and personalising learning materials to match children's interests and skills, and many of their students were using it too though generally at home rather than in the classroom. But the survey of teachers and also found most primary schools did not have AI policies. "Teachers often don't have the appropriate training, they are often using the free models that are more prone to error and bias, and there is a dire need for guidance on best practice for using AI in the primary classroom," report author David Coblentz said. Coblentz said schools needed national guidance and students needed lessons in critical literacy so they understood the tools they were using and their in-built biases. He said in the meantime schools could immediately improve the quality of AI use and teacher and student privacy by avoiding free AI tools and using more reliable AI. The report said most of the teachers who responded to the survey said they had noted mistakes in AI-generated information. Most believed less than a third of their pupils, or none at all, were using AI for learning but 66 percent were worried their students might become too reliant on the technology. Most of the mostly Year 7-8 students surveyed in four schools had heard of AI, and less than half said they had never used it. Those who did use AI mostly did so outside of school. "Between one-eighth and one-half of users at each school said they asked AI to answer questions "for school or fun" (12%-50%). Checking or fixing writing attracted moderate proportions everywhere (29%-45%). Smaller proportions used AI for idea generation on projects or homework (6%-32%) and for gaming assistance (12%-41%). Talking to AI "like a friend" showed wide variation, from one in eight (12%) at Case A to nearly half (47%) at the all-girls' Case D," the survey report said. Across the four schools, between 55 and 72 percent agreed "Using AI sometimes feels like cheating" and between 38 and 74 percent agreed "Using AI too much can make it hard for kids to learn on their own". Roughly a quarter said they were better at using AI tools than the grown-ups they knew. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store