Scientists have taught bees to smell the coronavirus. They can identify a case within seconds.

Authored by businessinsider.in and submitted by MistWeaver80

Dutch scientists have trained bees to smell COVID-19 .

to smell . Every time the bees were exposed to an infected sample, they stuck out their tongues.

The animals could be a low-tech solution for identifying COVID-19 cases.

Scientists in the Netherlands have trained bees to identify COVID-19 through their sense of smell, according to a press release from Wageningen University.

The research was conducted on more than 150 bees in Wageningen University's bio-veterinary research laboratory.

The scientists trained the bees by giving them a treat - a sugar-water solution - every time they were exposed to the scent of a mink infected with COVID-19. Each time the bees were exposed to a non-infected sample, they wouldn't get a reward (a process known as Pavlovian conditioning).Eventually, the bees could identify an infected sample within a few seconds - and would then stick out their tongues like clockwork to collect the sugar water.

Bees aren't the first animals to detect COVID-19 by scent. Researchers have also trained dogs to distinguish between positive and negative COVID-19 samples from human saliva or sweat with fairly high levels of accuracy. A small German study found that dogs could identify positive COVID-19 samples 94% of the time.

That's because metabolic changes from themake an infected person's bodily fluids smell slightly different than those of a non-infected person.

But researchers still aren't sure whether animals are the best bet for sniffing out COVID-19 cases outside the lab.

"No one is saying they can replace a PCR machine, but they could be very promising," Holger Volk, a veterinary neurologist, told Nature . PCR machines are what lab technicians use to process standard COVID-19 swab tests. At the very least, certain animals could be useful for identifying COVID-19 in places or countries in which high-tech laboratory equipment is scarce or inaccessible.

Wageningen scientists, for instance, are working on a prototype of a machine that could automatically train multiple bees at once, then uses their skills to test for coronavirus aerosols (tiny virus-laden particles) in the surrounding environment.

pm_me_your_kindwords on May 7th, 2021 at 21:04 UTC »

Is this “vaccinate or you will be stung”?

AreWeCowabunga on May 7th, 2021 at 20:55 UTC »

I guess technically this is "low-tech", but I feel like that glosses over the challenge of training fucking bees to smell coronavirus on a widely reproduceable basis.

ghafgarionbaconsmith on May 7th, 2021 at 20:44 UTC »

Lol 12 people shuffle into the testing room for covid. The doctors leave the room, the doors automatically lock behind them. An ominous voice comes over the speakers "release the bees..." Vents spring open and an ominous buzzing sound emanates from them..."