100 things challenge - 39: HeroRATS
Jan. 13th, 2013 10:57 pmRats are a nuisance, right? They carry diseases, eat animal feed and most people are just plain frightened of them. But, people in mine infested regions of Mozambique and Thailand are very grateful for the help of the trained African giant pouched rats to make their land safe again.
The Belgian NGO APOPO started training these rats to sniff out the scent of landmines and indicate their presence to their handler by scratching the ground. The insignificant weight of these rats mean the landmines won't detonate when the animals walk over them. The African giant pouched rats are longlived for rodents, they can reach an age of 6-8 years.
The demining operations with the so-called HeroRATS started in 2004 in Mozambique and in 2010 a second project has started along the Thai-Cambodian border. In Mozambique, the operations have cleared 2,5 million square meter of land of the danger of mines.
APOPO has also started a project to train these rats, with their exceptional olfactory abilities, to detect tuberculosis in human sputum samples. The project is still in the testing phase, but so-far it looks very promising: the rats can increase the TB detection rate by 43% compared to microscopy!

The Belgian NGO APOPO started training these rats to sniff out the scent of landmines and indicate their presence to their handler by scratching the ground. The insignificant weight of these rats mean the landmines won't detonate when the animals walk over them. The African giant pouched rats are longlived for rodents, they can reach an age of 6-8 years.
The demining operations with the so-called HeroRATS started in 2004 in Mozambique and in 2010 a second project has started along the Thai-Cambodian border. In Mozambique, the operations have cleared 2,5 million square meter of land of the danger of mines.
APOPO has also started a project to train these rats, with their exceptional olfactory abilities, to detect tuberculosis in human sputum samples. The project is still in the testing phase, but so-far it looks very promising: the rats can increase the TB detection rate by 43% compared to microscopy!

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Date: 2013-01-16 10:36 am (UTC)How are you doing btw? Haven't seen a lot of posts from you lately.
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Date: 2013-01-16 08:38 pm (UTC)I'm trying to be better about posting, even if it's just random silly things--but then I get involved in a book or a TV show or a song. :)