Japan's New Farm Guardian: Wolf Decoy-Mounted Ground Robot Patrols Fields to Deter Wildlife
Japanese farmers are deploying a small unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) fitted with a lifelike wolf decoy to autonomously patrol farmland and scare off crop-damaging wildlife such as deer and wild boar. Footage reportedly captured between 2023 and 2024 showcases the creative fusion of agricultural robotics and biomimetic deterrence.
Highlights
- Japanese farmers have deployed small UGVs fitted with lifelike wolf decoys to autonomously patrol farmland and deter wildlife such as deer and wild boar.
- The moving decoy prevents wildlife habituation—a common failure mode of static scarecrows—by continuously simulating a patrolling predator.
- Footage of the wolf decoy UGV in operation was reportedly captured between 2023 and 2024 and circulated via the Drone Wars X social media account.
- The solution was adopted independently by local farmers, reflecting grassroots demand for low-cost agricultural automation in Japan.
- The case illustrates a growing trend of agricultural robotics expanding from crop-production tasks into farm security applications across the Asia-Pacific region.
Japan's New Farm Guardian: Wolf Decoy-Mounted Ground Robot Patrols Fields to Deter Wildlife
Japanese farmers, long troubled by wildlife intrusions that damage crops, have turned to an inventive high-tech solution: a lifelike wolf decoy mounted atop a small unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) that autonomously patrols fields.
System Design and Operation
The core concept combines mobility with visual intimidation. Conventional scarecrows and static decoys tend to lose their effectiveness over time as wildlife habituates to their fixed positions. By contrast, a wolf-shaped decoy mounted on a moving UGV continuously traverses the farmland, simulating the patrolling behavior of a real predator and significantly boosting deterrence.
Farmer-Led Deployment to Protect Crops
According to reports, the devices have been purchased and deployed independently by local farmers, primarily to repel deer, wild boar, and other common agricultural pests. Footage said to have been recorded between 2023 and 2024 shows the robot moving slowly through fields while the wolf decoy sways realistically, creating a convincingly lifelike visual effect.
A New Direction for Agricultural Robotics
This case reflects a broader trend in agricultural robotics moving beyond traditional tasks such as seeding, fertilizing, and crop spraying into the realm of farm security. As rural depopulation and labor shortages become increasingly acute, low-cost, easy-to-operate automation solutions like this one may find wider adoption across agricultural markets in the Asia-Pacific region.
Image source: Drone Wars X account; original footage reportedly captured in 2023–2024.
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