Detection dog
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A detection dog is a dog that is trained to and works at using its senses (almost always the sense of smell) to detect substances such as explosives, illegal drugs or blood. They are often known as sniffer dogs. Hunting dogs that search for game and search dogs that search for missing humans are generally not considered detection dogs. There is some overlap in cases like cadaver dogs that detect human remains. In the state of California they use dogs for detecting the Quagga Mussel on boats at public boat ramps, as it is a invasive species. Sniffer dogs have even been enlisted to find bumblebee nests. The Bumblebee Conservation Trust has trained a springer spaniel to detect the colonies to assist them with conserving threatened species.
[edit] Functions
Detection dogs have been trained to search for many substances, including:
- Plants, animals, produce and other agricultural items (used by customs services to detect possible invasive species such as Quagga mussel)
- Cancer[1]
- Polycarbonate optical discs such as DVDs (used to search for bootleg recordings)
- Crime evidence
- Currency
- Drugs
- Expired food items (such as sandwiches)[citation needed]
- Explosives
- Mobile phones (as contraband in prisons[2])
- Firearms
- Human remains
- Mold
- Termites
One notable quality of detection dogs is that they are able to discern individual scents even when the scents are combined or masked by other odors. In one case at an Australian prison, a detection dog foiled an attempt to smuggle drugs that had been hidden in a woman's bra and smeared with coffee, pepper and Vicks Vapo-rub.[citation needed] A sniffer dog's sense of smell is 2000 times more sensitive than that of humans.[citation needed] They can even detect things (blood, etc.) that have been left for as long as 10 years.[citation needed] They can detect blood even if it has been scrubbed off surfaces. In one case, a sniffer dog sniffed a drop of blood on the wall that had been attempted to be scrubbed off. It was so small that it couldn't be seen without a microscope.[3] As of 2001, detection dogs are sometimes put in danger. They can be exposed to diseases like canine influenza, henipavirus, and rabies and parasites like fleas or ticks if terrorists want to destroy the dogs.
Some of these functions can be carried out by trained pigs, which also have an excellent sense of smell, and have been used to hunt truffles, underground fungi, for centuries.
[edit] See also
- War dog
- Police dog
- Lucky and Flo - The world's first optical disc-detecting dogs.
- Canine cancer detection
- Demining
- Mine clearance agencies
- DEMIRA Deutsche Minenraeumer e.V. - German Mine Clearer
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Michael McCulloch, Tadeusz Jezierski, Michael Broffman, Alan Hubbard, Kirk Turner, and Teresa Janecki. Diagnostic Accuracy of Canine Scent Detection in Early- and Late-Stage Lung and Breast Cancers. Integrative Cancer Therapies 2006; 5(1), 30-9.
- ^ Anderson, Jessica. "Prisons enlist dogs to keep out phones: Canines part of effort to keep contraband out of state facilities." Baltimore Sun 10 July 2008.
- ^ Dogs in the News. Dog Sniffs Drugs in Woman's Bra and the Top 8 Things People Hide in Their Underwear. Canine Nation 2002.

