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NJ Press: Dog detectives help

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Posted by: W von Papineäu at Sun Mar 20 16:37:58 2011   [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by W von Papineäu ]  
   

ASHBURY PARK PRESS (Neptune, New Jersey) 19 March 11 Dog detectives help conservationists sniff out other species

Not many dogs get to go for a walk in the woods and call it a job. But when CJ the

chocolate Lab sniffs at the ground and sits, he's doing some important work.

CJ is a conservation detector dog, trained by PackLeader dog training in Gig Harbor, Wash. He has traveled the world helping researchers working on various species, including maned wolves in Brazil, bobcats and bats in New Mexico and spider monkeys in Nicaragua.

In CJ’s most recent adventure, he was trained to find indigo snakes with the Orianne Society, a group devoted to the conservation of that species. The indigo, found only in the deep South, is one of the largest snakes in North America.

“They are spectacularly beautiful,” says Dirk Stevenson, directory of inventory and monitoring for the society. “They are blue-black – iridescent violet in sunlight, really – with large smooth scales and a hint of salmon blush on the chin and neck.”

If you’re not as susceptible to a snake’s beauty as Stevenson is, he has another way to sell you on this species: “They love to eat other snakes,” he says, including venomous ones.

The indigo snake is threatened by habitat loss and by declining numbers of gopher tortoises, whose burrows it uses for shelter. The snake has disappeared from some parts of its original range, so the first step in conserving it is to figure out where it still lives.

One way a dog can help is by following the scent of snakes hidden deep in burrows where they can’t be seen.

In some cases, conservation dogs are used to find not the animals themselves, but other evidence of their presence. For large animals, that may be scat, or droppings. For this project, CJ learned to find shed skins, as well as live snakes.

“The trained dog became gifted at finding the shed skins of the snake, which you or I could miss because they fall apart,” says Stevenson.

Even closely related species may smell different to a dog; CJ was trained to ignore other species of snakes and, for safety, to avoid rattlesnakes. Trainer Barbara Davenport says the dogs also can learn to generalize when necessary.

“We trained a dog on Javan rhinos,” she says, “but we didn’t have any scat from a Javan, so the project manager sent scat from all the other species.” The dog learned to respond to any species of rhino, which worked for the project, since only one type lived in the habitat being studied.

Davenport, who also works full time training narcotics detector dogs, has been training dogs for conservation work since 1997. Just as important as training, she says, is picking the right dog for the job.

PackLeader finds most of its dogs in shelters and looks for exactly the qualities that might bother the average pet owner. The ideal candidates have nice temperaments, Davenport says, but they’re also “high drive, high energy, obsessive, destructive when bored” – dogs that would be hard to find homes for.

Besides that, different dogs may work best for finding particular species.

“Some dogs are successful at bears, but you give them cat scat and they want to roll in it,” Davenport says.

For a research project on the North Atlantic right whale – its droppings float, and can be smelled from a distance – Fargo, a Rottweiler, was chosen because with his broad chest, he “was the best at balancing on the boat,” Davenport says.

CJ was picked for the indigo snake project because he’s a bit more laidback than some of the dogs. One, named Bruiser, “never saw brush he thought he couldn’t get through,” Davenport says. “CJ will look at it and say, you go first. That makes him best at working with live species – he’s not frantic to get at the source.”

CJ will get at least a month off before his next trip, but Stevenson hopes they’ll be working together again sometime.

“In the future, we hope to carry out reintroductions” of snakes into the wild, he says, and the dog would be a big help in following up on those animals’ progress. Especially where the snake is few and far between, he says, “the dog is a great tool.”
Dog detectives help conservationists sniff out other species


   

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  • You Are HereNJ Press: Dog detectives help - W von Papineäu, Sun Mar 20 16:37:58 2011

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