Source: BEE ALERT TECHNOLOGY, INC. submitted to NRP
SONOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS FOR RAPID DETECTION OF VARROA MITES AND OTHER PATHOLOGIES WITHOUT OPENING THE BEEHIVE
Sponsoring Institution
National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Project Status
COMPLETE
Funding Source
Reporting Frequency
Annual
Accession No.
0210118
Grant No.
2007-33610-17968
Cumulative Award Amt.
(N/A)
Proposal No.
2007-00123
Multistate No.
(N/A)
Project Start Date
Jun 1, 2007
Project End Date
Jan 31, 2009
Grant Year
2007
Program Code
[8.13]- (N/A)
Recipient Organization
BEE ALERT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
1620 RODGER ST., SUITE #1
MISSOULA,MT 59802
Performing Department
(N/A)
Non Technical Summary
General farm labor is in the $10.00 per hour range, and specialized labor, that is people trained in technical, biological or mechanical skills cost even more. Moreover, the cost of training increases also, since trainers are, in agricultural settings, generally part of the production crew taken out of production. Any crop production business that depends on honey bee pollination will be improved if the beekeeper who manages the bees used for pollination can save costs, or improve profit. The development of a handheld device that could measure a honey bee colony's condition without having to open a colony, without having to train the person what they were seeing when that colony was opened, and without the time and effort necessary to manipulate each frame in each colony would be a godsend to that industry. Examination time for entire beeyards by unskilled employees would be nearly the same as examination time for 1 or 2 pallets (4 or 8 colonies) now by trained employees. The savings would be incredible, the efficiency improved beyond imagination, and the costs of these tasks reduced to nearly zero. Moreover, the results of these examinations would be consistent, reliable and repeatable, three variables that are less certain when human skills enter the picture.
Animal Health Component
100%
Research Effort Categories
Basic
(N/A)
Applied
100%
Developmental
(N/A)
Classification

Knowledge Area (KA)Subject of Investigation (SOI)Field of Science (FOS)Percent
3113010116020%
3133010111020%
4047210202060%
Goals / Objectives
Bee Alert Technology, Inc. has an Army Phase II award that is investigating the use of sonograms of honey bee colony sounds for rapid detection of air toxicants. Bee colonies alter sound output within 30 seconds of an exposure event, and the resultant sonograms change in ways that are characteristic of the type of chemical involved (i.e., provide a sonic fingerprint). The USDA project focuses on research on natural pests and diseases of bee colonies. The research includes field trials with bee colonies, as well as bench top work on the most appropriate data analysis methods for rapid detection of bee pathogens. Phase I will culminate with a design for a hand-held sensor. Specific research objectives include: 1) Verification of sonic detection of varroa mites, africanization of colonies, and queenlessness, 2) Exploration of expansion of acoustic methods to the discovery of foulbrood, hive beetle, and possibly pesticide exposure, and 3) Development of algorithms using statistical or artificial neural network (ANN) methods for sonographic analysis.
Project Methods
For varroa mites and American Foul Brood, we will work with scientists who maintain well-characterized colonies for experimental work. Primarily, this will include continued work with Jeff Harris and Stephen Pernal. They have both agreed to collect data or allow our technicians to collect data, at no cost. For sampling Africanized bees and hive beetle, we will work with volunteers, including other researchers and beekeepers. We already have a list of researchers and beekeepers in southern states who are more than willing to record sounds from Africanized hives (in Texas) and beetle infested hives, in Ohio, Georgia, and the Carolinas. For data collection for verification and expansion of acoustic profiling we have put together an acoustic sampling kit consisting of a digital Marantz PMD670 recorder, a microphone amplifier (SME 2100) from Saul Mineroff Electronics and two 1/8 inch diameter, 12 inch long, probe microphones. Each microphone is a high gain electret condenser microphone, one to be used for control hives, the other for mite infested or diseased hives. For meteorological data, we include a data-logging Kestrel 4000, weather meter. The kit is shipped in a water-tight, tough, polyethylene case, Pelican style. Guidelines for data collection are that the colonies need to be visually inspected and ranked according to degree of pathology (e.g., mite level, number of diseased cells, and scales, etc.) after sampling. For each hive, a two minute audio sample should be recorded in mid-morning, mid-afternoon, and after dark (when all of the bees are back in the hive for the night). Where possible, there should be a balanced data set of control and affected hives, or minimally three controls and ten stressed hives. Ideally, sampling would be conducted in the spring, mid-summer, and fall. When possible, we will gather data from colonies with the same type of problems, but different areas of the U.S. In all cases, the race of bees (if known) and basic meteorological data should be recorded. Filtered and summarized sonographic data are first analyzed using standard canonical discriminant function analysis to generate appropriate classification functions. The resulting unstandardized classification function coefficients are used as the basis for classifying subsequent sonographic data. Weighting new sonograms by the coefficient matrix produces a classification score which is then compared to a library of scores for known compounds to determine the most likely match. The exact method of interpreting sonograms is not restricted to discriminant analysis. For this USDA project, we will explore other techniques for sound pattern recognition that may be employed for this purpose. We anticipate that ANNs may prove to be useful, as well as additional statistical methods.

Progress 06/01/07 to 01/31/09

Outputs
OUTPUTS: A working PDA based prototype audio bee colony health scanner, with an 86% accuracy in detecting bee diseases and pests such as mites, Nosema, CCD, and queenless state in less than a minute. Device demonstrated at the California State Beekeepers Association meeting. PARTICIPANTS: Robert Seccomb - PI. Preformed data analysis and programming. Produced PDA based Colony Health program. David Plummer - Electronic Tech. Designed and built mcirophone systems. Scott Debnam - Bee Wrangler. Collected recordings and bee colony health inspections. Analysized bee samples using IVDS. Stacy Potter - Bee Wrangler/Copy Editor. Perfomr bee inspections, assist in report preparation, outreach, and demonstration. Colin Henderson - Statitician. Conduct multivariant analysis on audio recordings. Jerry Bromenshenk - Co-PI. Report generation, outreach and demonstration. TARGET AUDIENCES: The beekeeping industry, honey producers, seed production, hobbyists and researchers. Anyone who works with or benefits from honey bees. PROJECT MODIFICATIONS: No major changes. Performed a no-cost extension to collect and analysis additional bee recordings, resulting in a working prototype.

Impacts
With the correct selection of audio ranges, determining a bee colony health with a 30 second audio recording was astounding. From there, producing a device from off the shelf material and getting it to bee inspectors and bee keepers became an overpowering need.

Publications

  • No publications reported this period