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London Lass
07-30-2008, 04:31 AM
Bees join hunt for serial killers

The way bumblebees search for food could help detectives hunt down serial killers, scientists believe.

Just as bees forage some distance away from their hives, so murderers avoid killing near their homes, says the University of London team.

This "geographic profiling" works so well in bees, the scientists say future experiments on the animals could now be fed back to improve crime-solving.

The team's work is reported in the Royal Society journal Interface.

"We're really hopeful that we can improve the model for criminology," Dr Nigel Raine, from Queen Mary, University of London (QMUL), told BBC News.

The scientist is working with colleagues Steve Le Comber and Kim Rossmo, a former detective in the US, to tag bees with tiny coloured numbers and follow them from their nests to flower patches.

The researchers' analysis describes how bees create a "buffer zone" around their hive where they will not forage, to reduce the risk of predators and parasites locating the nest. It turns out that this pattern of behaviour is similar to the geographic profile of criminals stalking their victims.

"Most murders happen close to the killer's home, but not in the area directly surrounding a criminal's house, where crimes are less likely to be committed because of the fear of getting caught by someone they know," Dr Raine explained.

Food importance

Understanding the geographic profiles of animals is interesting to biologists as it helps them predict the locations of important feeding grounds, and knowing these areas will inform more effective conservation measures.

This approach works well for very different creatures, from bees and bats to great white sharks.

The team has also been attaching radio tags to find out more about bee behaviour.

But what is more unusual is that models used to describe bee foraging can be applied back to human behaviour, the researchers say.

Instead of using information about the distribution of flowers visited by bees to explain the insects' behaviour, criminologists' models will use details about crime scenes, robbery locations, abandoned cars, even dead bodies, to hone the search for a suspect.

"Bees have much simpler brains and so understanding how bees are recruited to flowers is much easier than understanding the complex thoughts of a serial murderer," Dr Raine said.

More broadly, the London-based team hopes its work will lead to a better understanding of how one of the most familiar animals in nature goes about its daily business.

"Bees are hugely important to ecosystems and also important to humans," Dr Raine told BBC News.

"Bees' pollination 'services' account for about one in three mouthfuls of food that we eat as humans. They pollinate a huge diversity of our fruit and vegetable crops.

"If we don't know how bees forage then we don't really understand pollination, and that is quite detrimental to how we feed ourselves; which is becoming an increasing problem with bigger populations."

Dr Raine's team is also using tiny Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags - the same technology used to track stock in warehouses or supermarkets - to monitor the movements of bees.

The miniature tags are glued to the backs of the insects to record their movements in and out of the hive.


With vid at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7530666.stm

Karental
07-30-2008, 02:40 PM
:zm10: COOL! Good for bees!

packy
08-10-2008, 08:43 AM
Very interesting and it almost seems instinctive that we'd follow some of the same patterns as other creatures that serve for self-protection (not wanting to get caught.)

awakening2lite
08-11-2008, 01:46 PM
this is very thought provoking.

I hope it will end up as part of the Serial Killer forum.

packy
08-11-2008, 01:51 PM
I thought the same thing, Awake.

awakening2lite
08-12-2008, 05:05 PM
I thought the same thing, Awake.

Here's a link to the published study:

http://journals.royalsociety.org/content/a645708212j7k78m/fulltext.pdf

I found this interesting:

EXCERPT

The equation describes a two-part curve. Outside
the buffer zone radius, probability of offender residence
drops with distance from the crime location. Within the
buffer zone radius, probability of offender residence
drops with proximity to the crime location. Thus,
probability is maximal at the buffer zone radius:
because the function extends in all directions, in three
dimensions, the function output resembles a volcano
caldera

EXCERPT

What does GP tell us about bee foraging strategies?
First, it is encouraging that the model provides a useful
description of bee foraging behaviour, despite obvious
behavioural differences between bees and criminals. For
example, the GP model was originally developed to
describe cases in which criminals return to their
residence between crimes, but foraging bees often visit
hundreds of flowers during each foraging bout before
returning to their nest (Heinrich 1979; Raine et al.
2006a). Thus, although the first flower is selected in a
similar way as a crime site, i.e. with respect to the
animal’s/criminal’s home, the choice of each subsequent
flower visit is influenced more strongly by the locations
of the previous flowers visited than the nest entrance
location.