| Literature DB >> 27879818 |
Mary E Cablk1, John C Sagebiel2, Jill S Heaton3, Cindee Valentin4.
Abstract
The use of detector dogs has been demonstrated to be effective and safe for finding Mojave desert tortoises and provides certain advantages over humans in field surveys. Unlike humans who rely on visual cues for target identification, dogs use primarily olfactory cues and can therefore locate targets that are not visually obvious. One of the key benefits of surveying with dogs is their efficiency at covering ground and their ability to detect targets from long distances. Dogs may investigate potential targets using visual cues but confirm the presence of a target based on scent. Everything that emits odor does so via vapor-phase molecules and the components comprising a particular scent are carried primarily though bulk movement of the atmosphere. It is the ability to search for target odor and then go to its source that makes dogs ideal for rapid target recognition in the field setting. Using tortoises as targets, we quantified distances that dogs detected tortoise scent, followed it to source, and correctly identified tortoises as targets. Detection distance data were collected during experimental trials with advanced global positioning system (GPS) technology and then analyzed using geographic information system (GIS) modeling techniques. Detection distances ranged from 0.5 m to 62.8 m for tortoises on the surface. We did not observe bias with tortoise size, age class, sex or the degree to which tortoises were handled prior to being found by the dogs. The methodology we developed to quantify olfaction-based detection distance using dogs can be applied to other targets that dogs are trained to find.Entities:
Keywords: Mojave Desert.; biosensor; desert tortoise; detection distance; dog; olfaction; probability of detection
Year: 2008 PMID: 27879818 PMCID: PMC3673414 DOI: 10.3390/s8042208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.A tortoise detection dog performs his trained alert, the ‘sit’, near a tortoise in training. The dog demonstrates his ability to perform an independent alert upon locating and confirming the target.
Figure 2.Tortoise detection dogs carried GPS units that collected data in 1-s increments. The GPS units were placed in dog vests fitted with pockets. The data were post-processed to have cm-level geographic positional accuracy.
Summary statistics of detection distances for surface tortoises located using air scent during trials. “Known” were tortoises tethered as part of the study (n = 99). “Wild” tortoises were those that were located by the dogs but not placed as part of the study (n = 64). “All” summarizes all tortoises located by the dogs during the study (n = 163).
| Known (m) | Wild (m) | All (m) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.75 | 0.50 | 0.50 | |
| 56.01 | 62.82 | 62.82 | |
| 13.31 | 14.84 | 13.91 | |
| 11.24 | 10.35 | 11.13 |
Correlation coefficients for wind speed (m/s), temperature (C) and humidity.
| Wind speed | temperature | humidity | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wind speed | 1.0000000 | 0.4238679 | -0.4888721 |
| Temperature | 0.4238679 | 1.0000000 | -0.9172985 |
| Humidity | -0.4888721 | -0.9172985 | 1.0000000 |
Figure 3.Handler and dog tracks and tortoise locations for one trial. The GPS captured what is often called a ‘head snap’, where the dog makes a sudden sharp change in direction off his/her trajectory and goes directly to source.