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Florida Everglades Python Invasion: Bomb-Sniffing Dogs Used To Curb Snake Presence In National Park

Reuters  |  Posted: 04/30/2012 4:55 pm Updated: 05/ 1/2012 3:06 pm


By Barbara Liston

ORLANDO (Reuters) - Some bomb-sniffing dogs trained to help fight terrorism are turning their olfactory attention toward a different scourge: Burmese pythons in Florida's Everglades National Park.

The dogs are members of "EcoDogs," a three-year-old collaboration at Alabama's Auburn University between the science departments and the school's Canine Detection Research Institute, which trains dogs to detect explosives.

"The dogs are really, really good," said Christina Romagosa, a biologist at Auburn.

She said in a test of python detection in south Florida, the dogs could cover a search area 2.5 times faster than a person.

"People can only see that the snake is there if they can see the snake. The dogs can smell the snake even if it's not visually apparent to us," she said.

Todd Steury, an Auburn conservation biologist and co-founder of the project, said many of the EcoDogs were found temperamentally unsuitable for indoor explosives work but thrive outdoors searching for ecological targets.

Steury estimated training a new dog to detect a scent takes six to 10 weeks. Training for each additional scent takes "about 10 minutes. You can do it by accident if you're not careful," he said, by inadvertently rewarding the dog for something you weren't looking for, which then becomes part of the dog's repertoire.

Two black Labrador retrievers from EcoDogs, Ivy and Jake, went on assignment in 2010 to demonstrate to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers their potential usefulness in battling the python problem in the 2,358-square-mile (6,100-sq-km) Everglades park.

UPSETTING BALANCE

Environmentalists fear the pythons are upsetting the native ecological balance of South Florida. The invasion is generally attributed to both irresponsible pet owners dumping their snakes and 1992's Hurricane Andrew, which destroyed an adjacent exotic snake warehouse.

In controlled experiments, the EcoDogs success rate in finding pythons at the park was 75-92 percent, Romagosa said. The dogs helped researchers trap 19 pythons, including a pregnant snake with 19 eggs, according to an EcoDog report.

Linda Friar, spokeswoman for the Everglades National Park, said the snakes are so thoroughly adapted to the Everglades, and the park is so wild and inaccessible that there is no expectation of eradicating them, even with the dogs' help. The best hope is to prevent the pythons from spreading and be prepared for future invasions of new exotics, she said.

Romagosa said analysis is underway to determine whether the dogs can play a role in a rapid response team and whether funding their role , in a cost-cutting era is possible.

"The dogs would be useful in a scenario where we might not be sure the python has moved on beyond a certain range. The dogs can give us an idea of whether the species is present or not," she said.

Meanwhile, Ivy retired and was adopted, Steury said. Jake switched to a new project assessing the deer population in Alabama, looking for fawns and deer antlers.

Other EcoDogs are rooting out a tree fungus damaging forests in the state, and locating various skunk, bear and other animal populations based on their scat, or droppings.

"Pretty much a dog can be trained to find anything," Romagosa said.

SMART DOGS NOT THE BEST HUNTERS

Three years of working with the dogs disproved a common misconception that a smart dog is best, added Steury.

"The worst dog is a really smart but kinda lazy dog. Because that dog is always trying to figure out how he can cheat. Once you reward him for cheating, he's done. He'll never work again. The best dogs are the ones that are kind of dumb but just work really hard. We can train those dogs to work all day long and they're the best detection dogs," Steury said.

And the dogs enjoy the work so much that ones like Kasey, who searches for weasel, bobcat and gray fox scat, eventually lose interest in the reward, he said.

"She finds a scat, you'll give her the ball, she plays with it for a really short time, then she's back to the search. She likes the search," Steury said.

(Editing by David Adams and Eric Walsh)

Earlier on HuffPost:

FOLLOW WEIRD NEWS

By Barbara Liston ORLANDO (Reuters) - Some bomb-sniffing dogs trained to help fight terrorism are turning their olfactory attention toward a different scourge: Burmese pythons in Florid...
By Barbara Liston ORLANDO (Reuters) - Some bomb-sniffing dogs trained to help fight terrorism are turning their olfactory attention toward a different scourge: Burmese pythons in Florid...
Filed by Hilary Hanson  | 
 
 
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ericmiami
Liberal with a CCW
08:28 AM on 05/04/2012
Maybe amplify Palin's voice and screech them out of the Park?
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cuoi
I wish everyone happiness.
07:59 PM on 05/03/2012
Pythons the size of telephone poles are certainly imposing. But what about other exotic snakes people get tired of and release? Any black mambas, king cobras or tiger snakes slithering about Florida neighborhoods?
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giftoflife898
Without God all things are permitted
12:19 AM on 05/04/2012
Yes. People dump any kind of animal that they no longer want. A black mamba was loose once and I have never heard of any other venomus snakes. But constrictors are common. I actually own 2 cats that people dumped in the county parks, my husband was employed there. Either the alligators or preditory birds will get them.
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cuoi
I wish everyone happiness.
12:22 AM on 05/04/2012
One bite of tiger snake and you have 30 minutes life left. Note to self: never return to FL.
g9
conservation ,Your grandchildrens future
01:36 PM on 05/03/2012
Better minds than yours are working on the problem....
100% eradication isn't possible without a really big bomb..
.so that's out ,but to control the population is a necessity...

The last thing a national park needs is a bunch of wahoos running around with guns shooting all the snakes...Most of the snakesthere are necessary for a balance in the enviroment ....
Exotics are a problem in most enviroments
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giftoflife898
Without God all things are permitted
12:21 AM on 05/04/2012
Actually most people will not just run around the swamps shooting at anything. They are definately not a safe place. But, we really need to remove all of these constrictors. They have no natural enemies, and will eat anything. We have many endangered species of birds, animals and some reptiles. If they are not removed, the natual wildlife will be devastated.
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arianaart
There is no sensible way to do a senseless thing.
09:23 PM on 05/02/2012
Curbing the snake presence is not an easy task.
These Pythons eat amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals varying in size from small rodents to deer.
Too~~approximately 26% of all fish, reptiles, birds, and mammals are in the South Florida Everglades —more than in any other part of the United States. And,~~though the control of these exotics under U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service costs over $500 million a year~~there are more than 1,700,000 acres of land in South Florida which remain infested.
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giftoflife898
Without God all things are permitted
12:22 AM on 05/04/2012
Thanks
06:01 PM on 05/02/2012
I volunteer to go there and blow their little heads off for free.
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cuoi
I wish everyone happiness.
07:53 PM on 05/03/2012
Calm down Sparky...they got dogs for that...
05:59 PM on 05/02/2012
And thanks to stupid people who have snakes and let them go when they get to big or escape ,
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cuoi
I wish everyone happiness.
08:00 PM on 05/03/2012
Have you seen my pet bamboo viper? Haven;t seen it for a week or so,,,
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giftoflife898
Without God all things are permitted
12:22 AM on 05/04/2012
I think my mongoose ate him!
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MrGovtCheese
We don need no stink'n badges ...
08:37 AM on 05/02/2012
"... and 1992's Hurricane Andrew, which destroyed an adjacent exotic snake warehouse."

Imagine right after the hurricane when folks were thinking, how could it get any worse than this.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
07:29 AM on 05/02/2012
go out there with chainsaws and dice em up for the alligarors
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nicko68
06:39 AM on 05/02/2012
Here's a novel idea, kill them!
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GraphicMatt
Somebody make me a sandwich!
11:42 AM on 05/02/2012
You sort of have to FIND THEM FIRST. That was the point of the article if you had bothered to have read it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joyce A King
The more people I know, the more I love my dogs.
06:21 AM on 05/02/2012
Dogs are the greatest! But this article makes me wonder, did Native Americans consider Pale Faces an invasive species? Hhhmmm....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
riverflow
07:35 AM on 05/02/2012
Yes and now looooooooook.
01:03 AM on 05/03/2012
Most certainly and with good reason!
11:45 PM on 05/01/2012
Florida needs to come up with some recipes for python....barbeque, blackened, filets....uses as fish bait, etc
12:27 PM on 05/02/2012
The only down side to that is that the Burmese python has a high mercury in its system. It's only natural predator is the rock python
So we cannot eat them, it sucks
reciprocat
On November 6, 2012...God blessed America
10:53 AM on 05/03/2012
IMPORT MORE ROCK PYTHONS!!!! :-P
11:23 PM on 05/01/2012
Is there anything dogs can't do?? My God, get rid of the Dems and Repubs and let our country go to the dogs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jose Perez Hernandez
10:04 PM on 05/01/2012
Can these same dogs locate the 70 or 80 congressmen who made a pledge to vote against any tax increases?,,,,,,,, another version of a subversive species driven to upset a natural balance....
07:27 AM on 05/02/2012
dogs loyalty and love proves they are conservatives , never happen
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
eyelashviper
In wilderness is the preservation of the world
10:21 AM on 05/02/2012
dogs are too smart to be conservatives.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IfIonlyknew
Go ahead....Say something funny.
07:59 PM on 05/02/2012
What does Love and Loyalty have in common with conservatives? Absolutely nothing
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clb45para
07:36 PM on 05/01/2012
Too bad no one can develop a species specific poison for these things.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jose Perez Hernandez
10:06 PM on 05/01/2012
it is theoretically possible to render the Burmese Pythons impotent by re-programming or causing to become sterile...... their reproductive systems
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clb45para
07:28 AM on 05/02/2012
Good project for the University of Fl. They solved the screw worm problem in Florida by sterilizing male flies and dumping them out over the state.