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German Company Training Cockroaches to Spy, Assist in Search-and-Rescue Missions

Mike Hammer

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Swarm Biotactics

A German company is working on a bizarre scheme to turn cockroaches — fitted with tiny backpacks — into an army of spy bugs.

The outfit is named — no surprise — SWARM Biotactics, which is working to use Madagascar hissing cockroaches for spying and search-and-rescue missions, according to Daily Star.

The plan is to equip the insects with tiny backpacks that carry cameras, microphones and Doppler radar.

Stefan Wilheim/Linkedin

The species of roach was picked because it’s tiny enough to squeeze anywhere and tough enough to survive chemicals, heat and radiation that would be dangerous for humans, explains CEO Stefan Wilhelm.

“Millions of years of evolution actually produced a very resilient, a very mobile and a very capable insect,” Wilhelm says. “That is, for what we want to do, a perfect, perfect animal, actually.”

Swarm Biotactics

The Madagascar bug is ideal because it’s strong enough to tote a “significant payload,” he says, of backpacks weighing up to 15 grams — but company experts are even trying to reduce that to 10 grams.

SWARM researchers control the roaches by attaching tiny electrodes to their antennae and stimulate them in the wanted direction.

Swarm Biotactics

Also under development are algorithms for controlling the bugs.

“With that algorithm we create, you can steer a whole swarm of insects towards a target,” says Wilhelm.

“And that could be 10, that could be also, like, a hundred.”

He also insists the company’s methods are painless, saying the roaches “are very important for us, and they need to be in very good condition, and have a good life, in order to, you know, perform well in their missions.

“We make sure we take good care of them.”

Swarm Biotactics

The company is currently working with the German military, he says, because the spy roach “gives you a capability no other system can give you because it can go to places where you otherwise couldn’t go with any other technology.

“Some cockroaches are more for the camera, some are more for communication, for positioning.

“But you can carry a lot of different sensors, according to what you need.”

And just think — the roaches work for crumbs.

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