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

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



A pack of dogs that trained to protect wildlife have already saved 45 rhinos from poachers in South Africa.

The dogs, who range from a beagle to bloodhound, began training from birth and learnt how to handle all the pressures of real operations before working at 18 months-old.

Sean Viljoen, who is based in Cape Town, shared photographs of the dogs in action at the Southern African Wildlife College in Greater Kruger National Park.

The 29-year-old is the owner of a production company called Conservation Film Company which aims to bring cinematic storytelling to the characters on the frontline of conservation and share stories of hope.

Johan van Straaten, who is a K9 Master at the college, said: “The data we collect for this applied learning project aimed at informing best practice, shows we have prevented approximately 45 rhino being killed since the free tracking dogs became operational in February 2018.

“In the areas where the Southern African Wildlife College patrol, the success rate of the dogs is around 68 per cent using both on and off leash free tracking dogs, compared to between three to five per cent with no canine capacity.

“The game changer has been the free tracking dogs who are able to track at speeds much faster than a human can in terrain where the best human trackers would lose spoor.

0 PAY CATERS ANTI POACHING DOGS 012 3369193
Johan van Straaten with the trained dogs (Image: Sean Viljoen / SAWC / Ivan Carter WCA / Caters News)

“As such, the project is helping ensure the survival of southern Africa’s rich biodiversity and its wildlife including its rhino which have been severely impacted by wildlife crime. South Africa holds nearly 80 per cent of the world’s rhino.

“Over the past decade over 8,000 rhino have been lost to poaching making it the country hardest hit by this poaching onslaught.”

0 PAY CATERS ANTI POACHING DOGS 003 3369184
Dog handlers Precious Malapane [left] and Robynne Wasas [right] (Image: Sean Viljoen / SAWC / Ivan Carter WCA / Caters News)

0 PAY CATERS ANTI POACHING DOGS 019 3369200
The dogs start working at 18-month-old after being trained from birth (Image: Sean Viljoen / SAWC / Ivan Carter WCA / Caters News)

The dogs which include a Texan Black-and-Tan Coonhounds, Belgian Malinois, Foxhounds and Blue Ticks are trained to ‘benefit required counter poaching initiatives’ which includes free tracking, incursion, detection, patrol and apprehension dogs.

He adds: “They begin training from birth and are socialised from a very young age.

“They learn how to track, bay at a person in a tree and follow basic obedience.

0 A male white rhinoceros shows off his te
The rhinos have been saved from poachers (stock image) (Image: AFP)

“At six months we put all that training together more formally – they do have the necessary skill set to do the work at a younger age but are not mature enough to handle all the pressures of real operations.

“Depending on a number of factors dogs become operational at around 18 months old.”

Lead Image Source: The pack of dogs have saved the lives of 24 rhinos (Image: Sean Viljoen / SAWC / Ivan Carter WCA / Caters News)

This article was first published by The Mirror on 13 May 2020.


What you can do

Support ‘Fighting for Wildlife’ by donating as little as $1 – It only takes a minute. Thank you.

 

payment

 

Fighting for Wildlife supports approved wildlife conservation organizations, which spend at least 80 percent of the money they raise on actual fieldwork, rather than administration and fundraising. When making a donation you can designate for which type of initiative it should be used – wildlife, oceans, forests or climate.

 

Dive in!

Discover hidden wildlife with our FREE newsletters

We promise we’ll never spam! Read our Privacy Policy for more info

Supertrooper

Founder and Executive Editor

Share this post with your friends




Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

7 Comments