Edmonton Journal

Do you know what you’re eating?

A DNA bar-coding kit could help prevent fraud by identifyin­g species in your food

- Laura Brehaut

From enigmatic sausages to fake fish, the authentici­ty of the foods we eat is increasing­ly in question.

It may seem like a new concept, but food fraud is a worldwide issue with a long history — and scammers have come a long way from crudely diluting milk with plaster in the Middle Ages. Fraudulent foods can be exceedingl­y difficult (if not impossible) for a layperson to detect. The swindlers of today are sophistica­ted, and the financial stakes are high.

While experts push for full traceabili­ty in convoluted supply chains to combat food fraud, University of Guelph researcher­s have created a new tool that puts detection in the hands of non-scientists, the CBC reports.

Designed for home use, Lifescanne­r uses DNA bar-coding technology to “identify what you’re eating, what’s in your garden, or in your home.”

The species identifica­tion kit costs $50 ($30.50 for a mini version) and is available in Canada and the U.S. via the Lifescanne­r website. To use it, you drop the samples (“food, beneficial bugs in your backyard, fur or any animal tissue”) in supplied specimen vials filled with DNA preservati­on fluid, scan them and drop them in the mail.

“It shows up at our lab where the DNA is extracted and the DNA bar code is read and scanned against the global database to identify the species and the informatio­n just goes flying right back to the user’s mobile app,” founder Sujeevan Ratnasingh­am, associate director of informatic­s at the Centre for Biodiversi­ty Genomics, told the CBC.

If the sample is from a known organism, “they can see where the organism lives, other places where it’s been found, other images of the organism and descriptio­ns.” However, in many cases, people find the unknown. Of the planet’s species, millions have yet to be scientific­ally described; a 2011 study estimated that roughly 86 per cent are unknown.

According to the company website, one of the goals of the tool is to educate people about biodiversi­ty: “We live in a biological­ly diverse world that we do not always recognize, but it is still there, affecting our lives and impacted by our actions.

“Lifescanne­r is an app for iphone and ipad devices designed to help people discover the diversity of living organisms around them and to help them contribute to a global knowledge base on biological diversity.”

 ??  ?? Technology is available to detect the DNA of the meat you’re buying to prevent cases of food fraud. Getty Images/istockphot­o
Technology is available to detect the DNA of the meat you’re buying to prevent cases of food fraud. Getty Images/istockphot­o

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada