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Home / The Country

Clever canines develop a nose for helping Taranaki conservation

Stratford Press
10 May, 2023 09:00 PM3 mins to read

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Biodiversity rangers Joe Carson and Raúl Johnson with their dogs. Photo / Sorrel Hoskin, DOC

Biodiversity rangers Joe Carson and Raúl Johnson with their dogs. Photo / Sorrel Hoskin, DOC

The Department of Conservation (DoC) has two new rangers-in-training to help protect Taranaki’s endangered wildlife - puppies Pip and Roscoe.

The four-legged “trainee rangers” are being upskilled by biodiversity rangers Joe Carson and Raúl Johnson, to become certified conservation dogs.

Six-month-old Pip, a German shorthaired pointer-border collie cross, is in training to become a protected species detection dog specialising in whio/blue duck.

If successful with her certification, she will assist Joe in monitoring the endangered species on the rivers and streams of Taranaki Maunga (Mt Taranaki).

Joe says having a trained dog able to find the elusive whio makes life easier when monitoring the species.

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“Pip will use her incredible sense of smell to locate birds hiding in roosts and rocks, indicating them from a safe distance, which means the whio can remain comfortable in their environment. Having Pip out on the river with us will make monitoring much more efficient, helping us to cover more ground and determine a more precise number of birds and nests,” she says.

Joe says the more information that can be sourced on their locations and breeding can sharpen DoC’s pest control focus to further protect the taonga.

With a total population of less than 3000, the endangered whio are rarer than some species of kiwi.

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Roscoe, a Jack Russell-fox terrier cross, is being trained to sniff out and indicate ferrets.

Roscoe is the first conservation dog to focus solely on ferrets, as opposed to mustelids in general. The focus on ferrets stems from recent incidents in Taranaki, including the Kaitake Ranges, in which the deaths of kiwi have been attributed to ferret predation.

Ferrets are particularly dangerous to native wildlife as they are large and can easily kill adult kiwi. Once they are into the scent of kiwi, an individual ferret can decimate a population.

Raúl says ferrets are wily and harder to catch using standard pest control methods compared to mustelids such as stoats.

“Having a specially trained dog will help us track down these elusive and damaging predators.”

Training a conservation dog and handler team is a serious and long-term commitment, taking around 18 months of daily work and routine.

The teams are required to meet a high standard to pass certification assessments and to maintain their standard at that level.

Once certified they will still need to train several times a week for the duration of the dog’s working life (up to 12 years, depending on the species).

For Pip and Roscoe there are still hurdles to climb over and hoops to jump through before they can be given their DoC uniform. Feedback so far is they are doing well.

However, it’s not just the puppies who have to be put through their paces. To train a safe and successful dog, handlers must have experience working with the target protected or pest species, plus dog-handling and training experience.

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Joe is well known in Taranaki for her work alongside her whio dog Tai, who tragically died last year. Raúl has years of experience in the pest control field, utilising many different methods.

He has been active in kiwi conservation, furthering his desire to protect this treasured species.

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