All research programs
Pillar 02 · Active
TERRA

Ecosystems & environment

TERRA is the EFEIA Research Institute's pillar on the natural world. The program studies how artificial EMF affects pollinators, soils, food production, animal welfare, and the function of whole ecosystems. The work begins where the signal first appears: at the level of organisms most sensitive to electromagnetic environments.

Status 1 active · 3 planned
Flagship project Apiary Protection
Domain Pollinators, soils, livestock, ecosystems
Method Field-based observation & measurement
What TERRA investigates

The natural world, under exposure

Artificial EMF saturates the same fields, hives, soils, and livestock environments that produce most of what humans eat. Most of these effects have not been measured. Some have been documented for years and remain unaddressed in policy and practice.

TERRA exists to characterize what is happening across living systems. The pillar's flagship project follows honeybee colonies under varying electromagnetic conditions. Three planned investigations extend the work to soils and crops, to livestock and poultry, and to whole-ecosystem impact studies.

Pollinators come first because they show first. Their navigation, foraging, and survival respond to the electromagnetic environment in ways that scale up to broader patterns of ecosystem health. They are an early-warning signal for the larger work the pillar is built to do.

If pollinators stop pollinating, every layer of agriculture above them is at stake.
Four ecological domains

The scale of the work TERRA covers

One pillar, four interdependent layers of life under electromagnetic pressure. Each domain is a research front in its own right, and each one informs the others.
01
Pollinators
Apiary Protection · Honeybees & native pollinators

Honeybee colonies in long-term observation. The work characterizes effects on foraging, queen activity, hive coherence, and survival, and establishes apiary EMF measurement protocols.

Active
02
Soils & crops
Agriculture & Soil Health · Below the surface

How artificial EMF interacts with soil microbiomes, root systems, and the chemical signaling that plants depend on for growth and defense.

Planned
03
Livestock
Livestock & Poultry Health · Animal husbandry

Effects of EMF saturation in industrial animal husbandry on physiology, behavior, reproduction, and welfare. The animals most exposed are also the least studied.

Planned
04
Ecosystems
Ecosystem Impact Studies · Biome-scale function

Cumulative ecological consequences where artificial EMF environments persist over years and across whole regions. The hardest layer to measure, and the one with the longest timeline.

Planned
Subprojects

Four lines of inquiry

One pillar, four ecological scales. Apiary Protection leads as the flagship and produces results today. Three companion investigations are scoped and ready to launch as funding and field partnerships come online.

01 / Flagship Active

Apiary Protection

TERRA's flagship investigation. The project follows honeybee colonies over long observation periods to characterize how artificial EMF environments affect colony behavior, queen activity, foraging patterns, and survival. The methodology defines measurement protocols that other apiary researchers can replicate, and the findings inform both apicultural practice and broader pollinator policy.

Colony behavior
Foraging routes, hive coherence, brood patterns, and queen activity tracked through varying EMF conditions.
Survival & vitality
Long-term colony survival, swarming behavior, and seasonal recovery under different exposure environments.
Apiary protocols
Measurement and reporting standards for apiary EMF environments, designed to be replicable across regions.
02 Planned

Agriculture & Soil Health

Soil microbiomes, root systems, and the chemical signaling between plants and microbes are sensitive to electromagnetic conditions. This program measures those effects and links them to crop performance and food-system resilience.

Below ground Microbial communities, root signaling, and soil chemistry under EMF pressure
03 Planned

Livestock & Poultry Health

Animals raised in industrial husbandry conditions live their entire cycles inside artificial-EMF-rich environments. The program documents physiological and behavioral effects across cattle, swine, and poultry operations.

In the barn Physiology, reproduction, behavior, and welfare in industrial production
04 Planned

Ecosystem Impact Studies

Cumulative effects across whole biomes where artificial EMF environments persist for decades. Methodology will draw from comparative field ecology and remote-sensing approaches developed in adjacent disciplines.

At biome scale Multi-decade cumulative effects on whole-region ecological function
First principle

The smallest organisms are the first to show it.

Honeybees orient by electromagnetic cues. Plants regulate growth signals through them. Soil microbes communicate by them. When artificial EMF saturates an environment, the smallest, most electromagnetically sensitive organisms register effects long before larger animals do. TERRA starts where the signal appears first, and lets that signal point to where the next investigation needs to go.

Get involved

Partner with TERRA's apiary work, or join the next domain we open.

Apiary Protection welcomes apiculturists, pollinator researchers, and apiary owners willing to share data, host instrumentation, or collaborate on measurement protocols. The three planned domains will need similar partnerships in agriculture, animal husbandry, and field ecology.