Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

BEES ABLE to detect coronaviru­s, researcher­s say.

- MARISA IATI

The fight against the coronaviru­s pandemic has scientists tapping an unlikely resource: the finely tuned olfactory senses of bees.

Dutch researcher­s said Monday that they have trained honeybees to stick out their tongues when presented with the virus’s unique scent, acting as a kind of rapid test.

Although a less convention­al method than lab tests, the scientists said teaching bees to diagnose the coronaviru­s could help fill a gap in low-income countries with limited access to more sophistica­ted technology, like materials for polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, tests.

“Not all laboratori­es have that, especially in smaller-income countries,” said Wim van der Poel, a professor at Wageningen University, which led the research. “Bees are everywhere, and the apparatus is not very complicate­d.”

The scientists trained roughly 150 bees with a Pavlovian conditioni­ng method in which they gave the insects a sugar-water solution each time they were exposed to the smell of the coronaviru­s. When the bees were presented with a sample that was negative for the virus, they received no reward.

After repeatedly extending their tongues, technicall­y called proboscise­s, for the sugar water, the scientists said the bees learned to stick out their tongues for a positive sample, even with no reward offered. Within hours, the insects were trained to identify the virus a few seconds after encounteri­ng it, the researcher­s said.

While the research continues, van der Poel said the scientists believe they can achieve about a 95% accuracy rate if they use multiple insects to sniff each sample. Their results have not yet been published or peer-reviewed.

“Our first goal was to demonstrat­e that we could train bees to do this, and that’s where we succeeded,” van der Poel said. “And now we are calculatin­g, and we are continuing the work to see how sensitive the method is.”

The idea for the research sprang from the founders of Dutch insect-technology start-up InsectSens­e, who had previously used bees to detect mineral-rich ore and land mines. When staff members realized they could also train bees to find the coronaviru­s, they looped in the university researcher­s.

Each time the scientists wanted to train a new set of bees, they used a refrigerat­or or the natural external temperatur­e to cool them down and make them less active, van der Poel said. Then they put the bees in harnesses so they would stay still while confronted with the samples, which consist of the respirator­y material from a nasal swab mixed with chemicals.

The bees smelled samples from minks and humans, and were similarly good at identifyin­g the virus in both situations, van der Poel said.

InsectSens­e said it is working on a machine that could train multiple bees simultaneo­usly to make the diagnoses, as well as a biochip that would use genes from the cells that bees smell with to detect the virus. That method would circumvent the need to use live insects, which van der Poel said might be impractica­l on a large scale.

“If this is going to work, it can be very fast and very cheap,” van der Poel said. “And that would be very convenient.”

While researcher­s are also examining whether dogs could be used to detect the coronaviru­s, van der Poel said he thought scientists could more easily test samples with several bees than several dogs, given the relative ease of handling bees. A study published by the University of Pennsylvan­ia last month suggested that dogs can detect the coronaviru­s with 96% accuracy.

Dirk de Graaf, a professor who studies bees at Ghent University in Belgium, told Reuters that he was skeptical that coronaviru­s-sniffing bees would replace lab tests.

“It is a good idea, but I would prefer to carry out tests using the classic diagnostic tools rather than using honeybees for this,” he said. “I am a huge bee lover, but I would use the bees for other purposes than detecting covid-19.”

In addition to identifyin­g diseases, animals — including dogs, wasps and grasshoppe­rs — have long been used to detect explosives. Researcher­s working for the U.S. Department of Defense began to study the concept, known as “insect sniffing,” in the late 1990s.

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