press release
Published: 03 October 2024

Meet Plantolin, the tree-planting robot pangolin built at the University of Surrey

A robot pangolin designed to plant trees is the winner of this year's Natural Robotics Contest. As the winning entry, the pangolin – dubbed "Plantolin" – has been brought to life by engineers at the University of Surrey in the United Kingdom. 

Out of 184 entries, the winning design came from Dorothy, a high school student from California. 

My entry was inspired by pangolins since they are fascinating creatures and have a very distinct armoured and prehistoric appearance (like a walking pine cone). They're not very fast or ferocious but have an adorable waddle walk.

In my high school classes, we learned about how deforestation contributes to climate change. The restoration of forests through planting more trees is essential for the sustainable development of our planet.

Pangolins spend a lot of their time digging in the ground, so I thought a planter robot inspired by the pangolin's behaviour would be very natural.
Dorothy, Natural Robotics Contest winner

After Dorothy's design was chosen, a working version was built at the University of Surrey.  

Plantolin roves on two wheels, with a long, movable tail for balance. Covered in plywood scales, it digs using its claws, depositing a yew "seed bomb" into the hole.  

The annual Natural Robotics Contest rewards robot designs inspired by nature. It is funded by the British Ecological Society's outreach grant programme. 

Its partners include the University of Surrey, Queen Mary University of London, the Royal College of Art, EPFL Lausanne, the Technical University of Munich, and Alexander Humboldt University, Berlin.  

Entries are now open for the 2024 competition. To sign up, visit https://www.naturalroboticscontest.com/ 

NOTES TO EDITORS 

 

 

Related sustainable development goals

Image for Climate Action Sustainable Development Goal

Share what you've read?

Media Contacts


External Communications and PR team
Phone: +44 (0)1483 684380 / 688914 / 684378
Email: mediarelations@surrey.ac.uk
Out of hours: +44 (0)7773 479911