UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, November 28, 2006
11:50 Mecca time, 08:50 GMT
News Americas
Bee for bomb disposal
Scientists say bees could be put to work
in hand-held bomb detectors

Scientists at a United States weapons laboratory have trained bees to sniff out explosives.

Researchers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico said they had trained honeybees to stick out their proboscis - the tube they use to feed on nectar - when they smell explosives.
By exposing the insects to the odour of explosives and then rewarding them with sugar water, researchers said they had trained bees to recognise substances ranging from dynamite and C4 plastic explosives to the Howitzer propellant grains used in improvised explosive devices in Iraq.
"When bees detect the presence of explosives, they simply stick their proboscis out," Tim Haarmann, a research scientist, told Reuters news agency.

"You don't have to be an expert in animal behaviour to understand it as there is no ambiguity."

The findings followed 18 months of research at the US energy department's Los Alamos facility, the country's leading nuclear weapons laboratory.
    
"We are very excited at the success of our research as it could have far-reaching implications for both defence and homeland security," Haarmann said.

He said the bees could be carried in hand-held detectors the size of a shoe box, and could be used to sniff out explosives in airports, roadside security checks, or even placed in robot bomb disposal equipment.
     
The next step would be to manufacture the bee boxes and train security guards in their use.
   
"It would be great to start saving some lives with this," he said.

Previously wasps have been trained to respond to traces of explosives but Haarmann said research with bees appeared to show more promise.
 Source: Agencies
 
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