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Everyone has heard of
the canary in the coal mine, which sways or drops dead
in the presence of poisonous gas, alerting miners to
get out. Now a University of Montana research team has
learned to understand the collective buzzing of bees
in their hives, which can provide a similar biological
alert system.
But bees evidently provide a lot more information than
canaries. The researchers, who work for a UM spin-off
technology company called Bee Alert Technology Inc.,
have found that the insects buzz differently when exposed
to various poisonous chemicals.
“We found bees respond within 30 seconds or less
to the presence of a toxic chemical,” said Research
Professor Jerry Bromenshenk. “The military is
interested in that for countering terrorism. But the
real surprise was that the sounds bees produce can actually
tell what chemical is hitting them.”
The insects also make different sounds when attacked
by honeybee maladies such as varroa mites or foul brood.
This may lead to applications that help beekeepers maintain
healthy hives.
“We can tell not only whether the colony has
mites or not,” Bromenshenk said, “but also
the level of infestation they have. The sounds they
make change with every stressor in characteristic ways.”
Scott Debnam, a Bee Alert field technician and self-described
“bee whisperer,” said people have known
for centuries that hives make a different sound when
the queen is removed. Now modern listening equipment
and computer software have revealed a secret bee vocabulary
much more intricate than previously thought.
Bees lack sound-making organs, but they buzz by vibrating
their wings and bodies and pushing air through spiracles
-- tiny airways used for respiration. Debnam said Bee
Alert discovered the unique hive sounds two years ago
while studying how bees react to a poisoning event.
The bees were filmed, recorded and counted, and it soon
became apparent that sound was the best medium for determining
if something toxic had entered the hive.
“We poisoned them with off-the-shelf stuff like
acetone and malathion -- the types of poisons they might
encounter in an agricultural situation,” he said.
“They responded within 30 seconds, which is amazing.”
Debnam said bees recycle the air in their hives every
three minutes and never sleep, so they can provide 24-hour
air monitoring, seven days a week.
“With some chemicals you can hear they don’t
like it,” he said. “With the solvent toulene,
for example, you hear their buzz go to BZZZZZZZZZZ just
like that.”
For most chemical agents, however, a more exacting
instrument than the human ear is needed. UM electronics
technician Dave Plummer designed a listening device
that’s basically a human hearing aid on a stick.
However, if you leave it in a hive for an extended period,
all you will hear is “crash, crash” noises
as the bees try to pull the foreign object out of the
hive or plug the end of the microphone. So Plummer had
to create a special screen cage to protect the microphone.
The device records the same type of “.wav”
audio files used for digital music. UM software engineer
Larry Tarver designed a mathematical algorithm that
allows a computer to analyze these files.
“Most of the time for bees their normal sound
range is 200 to 400 hertz,” Tarver said. “When
they get dosed with something, they really go to a high
amplitude.”
He said his program creates a running average to weed
out incidental noises such as doors slamming or horns
honking. Bee Alert’s Colin Henderson, a faculty
member at UM’s College of Technology, then examines
the audio samples with statistical analysis software.
The end result is an electronic signature for each type
of chemical or malady affecting the honeybees.
“To be honest, when I was collecting sounds in
the field, I thought, ‘Oh, this isn’t working,’”
Debnam said. “But I was wrong. You just can’t
hear this stuff with the human ear.”
Bee Alert uses “smart hives” filled with
electronics to monitor bee colonies, and these can be
adapted to monitor hive sounds. So if a hive is sprayed
with chemicals or invaded by pests or diseases, the
sounds can be analyzed and a signal sent immediately
via satellite to a beekeeper’s computer or cell
phone.
The researchers also hope to create a handheld listening
device that beekeepers can use on hives to instantly
tell whether the bees are healthy.
“What we are trying to do is revolutionize bee
technology,” said Steve Rice, an electronics engineer
and COT instructor. “Patents are pending on a
lot of this.”
The new audio technology also helps distinguish different
bee species. Debnam said there already is a device that
can tell the difference between 100 percent European
honeybees (the agricultural standard) and 100 percent
African bees (also known as killer bees). However, European
and African bees interbreed, and the Bee Alert audio
technology seems to detect when they have intermingled.
“You don’t want Africanized bees,”
Rice said. “They get angry easily.”
There also is some evidence the audio technology can
differentiate between the multiple types of beneficial
European honeybees used in agriculture. This can be
useful to the Montana beekeeper, for example, who needs
Russian honeybees instead of the Italian variety that
are more susceptible to mites. A simple swipe of a handheld
device and the beekeeper knows if the bees she ordered
are right.
Besides doing statistical analysis to study bee noises,
Bee Alert is using artificial neural networks to examine
the buzzes. Information systems manager Robert Seccomb
said ANN technology can recognize complex patterns on
sonograms and is used a lot in voice-recognition software.
“It’s not 100 percent accurate, but it’s
a lot quicker than statistical analysis,” Seccomb
said. “Once we build up a sufficiently large library
of recordings, I’m pretty sure ANN will give another
method of analyzing the sounds.”
He said if the statistical analysis method and ANN
both agree on the meaning of a buzz, “we’ll
know pretty much what the answer is. If one says ‘yes’
and the other says ‘no,’ then we will say
this is a questionable one, and you should check it
out anyway.”
Honeybees are vitally important to the success of humanity
-- not because they produce honey but because they pollinate
the majority of our crops. Debnam said Albert Einstein
once claimed that if all bees disappeared tomorrow,
then all people would follow a scant four years later.
“We think this new technology can help bees and
revolutionize beekeeping,” Debnam said. “If
you took a picture of beekeeping from 1947, it would
look just like a bee yard today -- with the same smoker
and other tools. Our audio technology might be one of
the bigger things to come along.”
Adapted from materials provided by University
Of Montana.
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