2 Ways Dogs Are Helping Save the Lives of Elephants

Every year, about 35,000 elephants are killed by poachers for their ivory tusks. The popularity of ivory is skyrocketing, especially in China, where the price for it tripled between 2010 and 2014. Because of this, the elephant population has decreased 62 percent in just a decade, to only about 400,000 worldwide.

If poaching continues, in another 10 years, elephants could very well be extinct.

To help prevent this tragedy, dogs are being trained to use their incredible senses of smell to track poachers and sniff out ivory.

‘Supernatural’ Dogs Track Poachers

When it comes to keeping poachers away from an area, “there is no tool more effective than tracker dogs,” according to the conservation organization Big Life Tanzania.

“Our dogs have tracked elephant poachers for up to eight hours at a time or more, through extreme conditions—heat, rain, wetlands, mountains—and still turned up results,” Damien Bell, the organization’s director, told National Geographic. “They love their handlers, and they do a job until the job is done.”

Up to 24 hours after a poacher has killed an elephant, trained tracking dogs can sniff out the trail to the door of the killer’s house.

“This is a significant deterrent: the poacher knows that nothing he can do will be able to change this,” writes Big Life Tanzania’s co-founder, Richard Bonham, on the organization’s website. “The Maasai in particular are terrified of tracker dogs, regarding them as somehow supernatural in their ability to track them down.”

One of Big Life Tanzania’s rangers, Mutinda, happens to a former poacher himself. He’s especially helpful since he’s familiar with secret trails.

“The real long-term benefit may be the example he is showing to his community through the growing prosperity of his family,” Bonham writes.

“The challenge is to find work and employment for others in his old poaching fraternity, in order to get them to change.”

To make a donation to the Big Life Foundation, click here.

Sniffing Out Ivory

To train dogs how to sniff out ivory at airports, seaports and border crossings, in 2014 the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) launched the Conservation Canine Programme in Tanzania.

The dogs, who are purchased from breeders in Europe, spend several weeks being taught to detect illegal wildlife products hidden in cargo or luggage.

The training begins with a Kong toy (affiliate link), which serves as a “neutral” odor, according to the AWF. Next, the dogs sniff small pieces of ivory.

“Positive reinforcement remains at the core of the program’s dog-training philosophy, with all training and handling done with the dogs’ physical and mental health in mind,” the AWF notes.

The dogs are then paired up with their handlers. The teams practice searching buildings, seaports and airports.

Will Powell, director of the Conservation Canine Programme, told CNN it was easier training the dogs than their handlers, because many of the handlers have never been around dogs.

“The first lessons are as basic as learning to call a dog across a room and be nice,” Powell said. “The dogs don’t get a paycheck, so handlers have to provide love and encouragement.”

The program’s first graduating class this year included eight dogs and 14 handlers from the Kenya Wildlife Service and Tanzania’s Wildlife Division. The teams will be deployed to areas identified as export or transit hubs for smuggled ivory.

The AWF is working with other wildlife authorities in Africa to potentially provide conservation canines throughout the continent.

“If dogs are used and intelligently placed, we are going to stop some of the routes the ivory comes through,” Powell told CNN. “The aim is to keep (poachers) on their toes.”

To make a donation to the African Wildlife Foundation, click here.

Photos: katjaFacebook

Pittsburgh Zoo Under Federal Investigation for Using Dogs to Herd Elephants

FEB. 2, 2015 UPDATE: The USDA has ordered the Pittsburgh Zoo to stop causing undue stress to the elephants by using herding dogs.

To “advance and improve” the care it provides for its elephants, three years ago the Pittsburgh Zoo began using siblings Major and Zeta — who are Australian Cattle Dogs — to herd them. It’s the only zoo in the Northern Hemisphere that uses dogs in such a capacity.

“The primary reason the herding dogs are working with our team is for the safety of our staff,” zoo spokeswoman Tracy Gray told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. “These relationships can be thought of in terms of traditional shepherding practices. In this case, our primary elephant keeper represents the shepherd; the elephants represent the flock; and the Australian Cattle Dogs assist the shepherd.”

In 2002, a handler at the Pittsburgh Zoo was killed when he fell and a mother elephant pushed her head on his chest. Thirteen years before that, an elephant kicked and broke the leg of another handler when he tried to give her medicine.

It’s all well and good that the staff is being kept safe, but what about the safety of the herding dogs?

“Video footage shows elephants displaying obvious signs of distress, including flapping their ears and trumpeting, as they’re chased and apparently nipped by dogs at the command of zoo staff,” states a press release from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). “In addition to the obvious stress that this causes the elephants, the dogs are in danger of being accidentally stepped on and killed or purposely attacked and thrown in the air by the agitated elephants.”

CBS Pittsburgh — which recorded the video PETA is probably referring to — reported back in May that Major and Zeta were trained “to handle massive elephants. They charge and nip at the elephants’ feet and trunks. The elephants have such respect for the dogs that even if they hear a handler say the name Major or Zeta, they take notice.”

Brittany Peet, PETA’s deputy director of captive animal law enforcement, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, “It’s not just inhumane, to both the dogs and the elephants, it’s dangerous.”

It is also against Pennsylvania state laws, which prohibit dogs from pursuing wildlife.

PETA has filed a complaint with the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture (USDA), which is now investigating the zoo.

Even without Australian Cattle Dogs nipping at their feet, elephants in zoos are already under a lot of mental and physical stress. In the wild, elephants walk up to 30 miles a day. Being forced to live inside a small enclosure — alone or with just one or two other cellmates — makes for some very unhappy elephants. (Just imagine if you had to spend your life walking circles in your bathroom.)

Of course, the safest alternative is to release the elephants to a sanctuary — a humane action that, fortunately, is being taken by more and more zoos. But since that’s not likely to happen, a better way to increase the safety of zoo employees would be to follow the lead of many other zoos, and use what is called protected contact.

Used by more than half of all accredited U.S. zoos, protected contact uses physical barriers to separate employees from elephants, and employs positive reinforcement methods.

Grey told the Post-Gazette that the zoo uses both protected and unprotected contact.

“Both methods use vocal commands, praise and food rewards,” she said. “If an elephant does not want to work with the keeper, the keeper leaves the area. We never punish our elephants for not cooperating.”

A spokeswoman for the USDA told the Post-Gazette the department is looking into the matter and will determine whether the zoo is complying with animal welfare act regulations

Photos via CBS News

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