Friday, 13 February 2015

What Is It?

maybe a hybrid greyhound on a lead racing around a track,


a racing rat being held back perhaps, in fact it is a rat that has been trained in land-mine-detecting, the African giant pouched rat (Cricetomys gambianus) from Tanzania, APOPO which stands for Anti-Persoonsmijnen Ontmijnende Product Ontwikkeling in Dutch, or Anti-Personnel Landmines Detection Product Development in English, is an organisation that trains and deploys rats, (they are not true rats), named HeroRATS, for the detection of abandoned land mines and tuberculosis, yes I did say and tuberculosis, about 54 rats are currently serving in 19 TB clinics in the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam, since 2002, they’ve screened 226,931 samples and identified 5,594 TB patients,


back to landmine clearing, since 2000, APOPO have bred hundreds of trained and accredited rats that have so far found 1,500 buried land mines across an area of 240,000 metres squared in Tanzania, and 6,693 land mines, 26,934 small arms and pieces of ammunition, and 1,087 bombs across 9,898,690 metres squared in Mozambique, they’re also operating in Thailand, Angola, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos and don’t panic, they’re too light to be setting off any buried explosives, but if you are the operator of one just remember not to get too close when it says, 'I have found one!'


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