Bees in the Netherlands trained to detect COVID-19 infections
Send a link to a friend
[May 08, 2021]
By Bart Biesemans
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Dutch researchers
have trained bees, which have an unusually keen sense of smell, to
identify samples infected with COVID-19, a finding they said could cut
waiting times for test results to just seconds.
To train the bees, scientists in the bio-veterinary research laboratory
at Wageningen University gave them sugary water as a reward after
showing them samples infected with COVID-19. They would get no reward
after being shown a non-infected sample.
Having got used to the system, the bees were able to spontaneously
extend their tongues to receive a reward when presented with an infected
sample, said Wim van der Poel, a professor of virology who took part in
the project.
"We collect normal honeybees from a beekeeper and we put the bees in
harnesses," he said. "Right after presenting a positive sample we also
present them with sugar water. And what the bees do is they extend their
proboscis to take the sugar water."
The extending of the bees' straw-like tongues to drink is confirmation
of a positive coronavirus test result, according to the researchers.
It can take hours or days to get a COVID-19 test result, but the
response from the bees is immediate. The method is also cheap,
potentially making it useful for countries where tests are scarce, they
said.
But Dirk de Graaf, a professor who studies bees, insects and animal
immunology at Ghent University in Belgium, said he did not see the
technique replacing more conventional forms of COVID-19 testing in the
near future.
[to top of second column]
|
A bee collects nectar from crocus during sunny winter weather, as
the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, at a
public park in Zurich, Switzerland, March 2, 2021. REUTERS/Arnd
Wiegmann
"It is a good idea, but I would prefer to carry out
tests using the classic diagnostic tools rather than using honeybees
for this. I am a huge bee lover, but I would use the bees for other
purposes than detecting COVID-19," he said.
The technique of "insect sniffing" was effectively tested by the
U.S. Dept. of Defence to detect explosives and toxins in the 1990s,
De Graaf said.
Moths, bees and wasps were used "for safety purposes to detect
explosives as well as for medical diagnosis," he said.
But too little is known about the Wageningen testing to determine
its true effectiveness, he said, although he was open to the idea of
bee testing providing an indication of illness when PCR tests were
unavailable.
(Reporting by Bart Biesemans, writing by Anthony Deutsch, editing by
Estelle Shirbon)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|