Dogs trained to protect wildlife have saved 45 rhinos from poachers in South Africa

 Many different canine breeds, ranging from beagles to bloodhounds, have been deployed to defend endangered species from poachers. The canines begin training at birth and learn how to manage all of the stresses of real-world operations before starting work at 18 months old.




Sean Viljoen, 29, of Cape Town, South Africa, posted photos of the dogs in action at the Southern African Wildlife College in the Greater Kruger National Park. He is the proprietor of the Conservation Film Company, which attempts to convey the experiences of individuals on the frontlines of conservation, sharing their stories of optimism.


'The data we collect for our applied learning initiative aimed at educating best practice reveals we have stopped about 45 rhinos from being murdered since the free tracking dogs became active in February 2018,' said Johan van Straaten, a K9 Master at the institution.


'In the regions that the Southern African Wildlife College patrols, the success rate of the dogs is over 68% utilizing both on and off leash free tracking dogs, compared to 3–5% with no canine capability.'


The game changer has been free tracking dogs, who can track at far higher rates than humans in terrain where even the greatest human trackers would lose spoor.



As a result, the project is assisting in the survival of southern Africa's unique biodiversity and animals, particularly rhinos, who have been badly hit by wildlife crime. South Africa is home to almost 80% of the world's rhinos.


Almost the last decade, over 8,000 rhinos have died as a result of poaching, making it the country hardest afflicted by this attack.' The canines, which include Texan Black-and-Tan Coonhounds, Belgian Malinois, Foxhounds, and Blue Ticks, have been taught to 'assist essential counter-poaching measures' such as free tracking, incursion, detection, patrol, and apprehension dogs. Precious Malapane and Robynne Wasas, both dog handlers, are members of the 'K9 unit quick reaction' squad and assist in the training of anti-poaching dogs.


Precious Malapane and Robynne Wasas, both dog handlers, are members of the 'K9 unit quick reaction' squad and assist in the training of anti-poaching dogs.

'They begin training from birth and are socialized from a very young age,' Johan van Straaten remarked.

'At six months, we bring all that training together more officially - kids do have the essential skill set to do the task at a younger age but are not mature enough to face all the stresses of real operations.'

Dogs become operational at roughly 18 months of age, depending on a variety of circumstances.'






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