Professor Blue

Serious about science since….first grade

FLYING DUST MOPS to help remove landmines?">FLYING DUST MOPS to help remove landmines?

Bzzz no bomb here

We know that with­out bum­ble­bees fruit will not grow on the vine, corn will not grow on the cob, alfalfa won’t feed farm ani­mals, and cot­ton will not grow into under­pants fab­ric for cloth­ing, right?  Am I right?  Even though bees can sting us, they’re nec­es­sary, like it’s nec­es­sary to eat cab­bage when we would rather have…a fruit roll-up.

Bees are like fly­ing dust mops,” says Jerry Bromen­shenk (Uni­ver­sity of Mon­tana, Mis­soula).  “Wher­ever they go, they pick up dust, air­borne chem­i­cals, and other sam­ples. If it’s out there, they’ll find it and bring it back.”

Researchers from the Uni­ver­sity of Mon­tana and San­dia Labs are train­ing bees to sniff out land mines, or explo­sives such as TNT, that are found in land mines.

They train the bees to think of candy bars some­thing sweet like honey while smelling explo­sives so that when they fly into a field that has land­mines, they will want to spend more time in the area, pick­ing up lots of the affected pollen and par­ti­cles as they go.

When the bees return to the hives built by San­dia Labs, researchers can detect whether or not there’s TNT in the hives with hand-held radar equip­ment that they can’t detect out in a ran­dom field.

This is very impor­tant, because if peo­ple can find the land­mines they can dis­able them, and get them safely out of the soil.  Poor farm­ers, and their chil­dren, will be able to use the land, not ruined by the poi­sons that explo­sives put in the soil, to grow food with­out blow­ing them­selves up.  It’s esti­mated that more than 10,000 kids die in fields that have land­mines every year.

What’s also excit­ing is how inex­pen­sive this solu­tion is because “…there are bee­keep­ers everywhere…and you wouldn’t need a million-dollar piece of equip­ment and exten­sive train­ing to use it.”

Read the full story at the San­dia web­site. Or even bet­ter: become an offi­cial bum­ble­bee observer for sci­en­tists!

posted by professor blue in Animals,Do something,General and have No Comments
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