All The Participant Mice In The Cloning Process. Top Left: Egg Donor. Top Right: Nucleus Donor. White Middle: Surrogate Mother. Two Brown Bottom: Cloned Offspring Of Nucleus Donor, A Result Of A New And Relatively Simple Cloning Technique Discovered By Scientists At The University Of Hawaii July 1998. The Scientists Have Created Dozens Of Cloned Mice, Marking The First Documented Cloning Of Adult Mammals Since Researchers In Scotland Announced The Birth Of Dolly The Sheep Last Year. (Photo By Getty Images) File photo of mice. (Photo By Getty Images)

TEL AVIV (CBSDC/AP) – In an effort to ferret out those trying to carry and conceal hidden bombs, drugs or other suspect materials, one Israeli company claims they have trained mice to sniff out any potential threats.

BioExplorers have developed a system where a person is hit by a small blast of air that is immediately pushed into a chamber where eight mice are waiting. The mice then smell the air for potentially hazardous or incendiary materials. They can even detect money.

If the person is a threat, the mice reportedly know to gather in a separate compartment as a means of alerting humans, AFP News learned.

“The idea began in 2000-2001, when there were many suicide bombings on [Israeli] buses,” BioExplorers founder and chief technology officer Eran Lumbroso was quoted as saying at the Israel Homeland Security exhibition in Tel Aviv.

He further explained, “”I was in the army at the time, and the idea emerged to use small animals instead of dogs in detecting suicide bombers.”

Animals are often used in finding bombs throughout the United States, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

“The ATF explosives detection canine, a graduate of ATF’s 10 week explosive detection training program, has been conditioned to detect explosives, explosives residue, and postblast evidence,” the official website states. “As a bonus, because of their conditioning to smokeless powder and other explosive fillers, ATF trained explosives detection canines can detect firearms and ammunition hidden in containers and vehicles, on persons and buried underground.”

AFP News learned that mice allegedly have even better senses of smell than dogs, however.

“The mice can also be easily trained, and thanks to their small size, you can use a small group of them and have multiple sensors,” added Lumbroso.

The animals reportedly work for four hours, before the next eight-mouse shift takes over. BioExplorer researchers also told the news service that they are careful to give the mice better treatment than that given to ordinary lab rodents.

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