[Dog Trainers take note! Also, will police depts. be sued for overly
aggressive wasps and bees?]

<http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/10/051021120542.htm>

Date:   2005-10-21

Trained Wasps May Be Used To Detect Bombs, Bugs, Bodies And More

An unusual device that uses trained wasps, rather than trained dogs,
to detect specific chemical odors could one day be used to find hidden
explosives, plant diseases, illegal drugs, cancer and even buried
bodies, according to a joint study by researchers at the University of
Georgia and U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The trained wasps are contained in a cup-sized device, called a "Wasp
Hound," that is capable of sounding an alarm or triggering a visual
signal, such as a flashing light, when the insects encounter a target
odor. The sensor is cheaper to use than trained dogs and more
sensitive than some sophisticated chemical detection methods,
including electronic noses, the researchers say. Their experimental
device is described in a study slated to be published in the Jan.-Feb.
issue of Biotechnology Progress, a joint publication of the American
Chemical Society and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.

The idea of using unconventional biological sensors to detect target
odors is not new, according to study leaders Glen C. Rains, Ph.D., a
biological engineer with the University of Georgia in Tifton, Ga., and
W. Joe Lewis, Ph.D., a research entomologist with the USDA's
Agricultural Research Service, also in Tifton. Rats, honeybees, fish
and even yeasts have all been used experimentally to detect various
explosives or toxins, they say.

"We've now developed a prototype device that puts the idea of using
chemical-sensing wasps into a practical framework and its
possibilities are astounding," says Rains, who believes that the
device could be ready for commercialization in five to ten years. Like
batteries in a smoke detector, the trained wasps won't live forever
and will eventually have to be replaced, he says.

In the current study, the researchers used Microplitis croceipes, a
species of tiny parasitic wasps that can be trained to detect certain
odors by associating the odors with a food reward. The wasps are not
capable of stinging humans, the scientists say. Training a single wasp
to detect a target odor can take as little as five minutes and the
insects can be easily bred by the thousands, they say.

The research team developed a special ventilated device, composed of
PVC pipe, which holds a small cartridge containing five trained wasps.
The wasps were trained to detect 3-octanone, a chemical produced by
certain toxic fungi that infect corn and peanut crops. The presence of
the fungi can result in costly crop losses.

The Wasp Hound contains a tiny camera that is linked to a computer to
record the movement of the wasps. In a controlled test, the device was
exposed to batches of dried feed corn containing either the target
chemical, myrcene (a compound of neutral interest to the wasps) or
corn alone. In comparison to a group of untrained wasps, the trained
wasps showed significantly stronger behavioral responses to the target
odor than to the myrcene and control treatments. Responses include
moving toward the target odor source and congregating around the
device's odor inlet. This movement can be translated into an alarm
signal to indicate the presence of a toxic plant fungus, the
scientists say.

Besides detecting plant diseases, the device has a wide variety of
other potential applications. In previous studies, the researchers
demonstrated that they also could train the wasps to detect
2,4-dinitrotoluene (2,4-DNT), a chemical used in certain explosives.
The wasps can also be used to detect chemical odors that are
associated with certain human diseases, including lung cancer, skin
cancer and stomach ulcers, they say. More recently, their group has
been looking into the possibility of using the wasps to detect odors
associated with hidden bodies, from murder victims to victims of
disasters.

The other collaborator in this study was student Samuel L. Utley,
M.S., currently a research engineer with the University of Georgia.
The study was funded by the university and by the USDA. The
researchers have filed a patent application for the Wasp Hound.

The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization, chartered
by the U.S. Congress, with a multidisciplinary membership of more than
158,000 chemists and chemical engineers. It publishes numerous
scientific journals and databases, convenes major research conferences
and provides educational, science policy and career programs in
chemistry. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus,
Ohio.

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