Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Accuracy and efficiency of detection dogs: a powerful new tool for koala conservation and management
View through CrossRef
AbstractAccurate data on presence/absence and spatial distribution for fauna species is key to their conservation. Collecting such data, however, can be time consuming, laborious and costly, in particular for fauna species characterised by low densities, large home ranges, cryptic or elusive behaviour. For such species, including koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus), indicators of species presence can be a useful shortcut: faecal pellets (scats), for instance, are widely used. Scat surveys are not without their difficulties and often contain a high false negative rate. We used experimental and field-based trials to investigate the accuracy and efficiency of the first dog specifically trained for koala scats. The detection dog consistently out-performed human-only teams. Off-leash, the dog detection rate was 100%. The dog was also 19 times more efficient than current scat survey methods and 153% more accurate (the dog found koala scats where the human-only team did not). This clearly demonstrates that the use of detection dogs decreases false negatives and survey time, thus allowing for a significant improvement in the quality and quantity of data collection. Given these unequivocal results, we argue that to improve koala conservation, detection dog surveys for koala scats could in the future replace human-only teams.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Accuracy and efficiency of detection dogs: a powerful new tool for koala conservation and management
Description:
AbstractAccurate data on presence/absence and spatial distribution for fauna species is key to their conservation.
Collecting such data, however, can be time consuming, laborious and costly, in particular for fauna species characterised by low densities, large home ranges, cryptic or elusive behaviour.
For such species, including koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus), indicators of species presence can be a useful shortcut: faecal pellets (scats), for instance, are widely used.
Scat surveys are not without their difficulties and often contain a high false negative rate.
We used experimental and field-based trials to investigate the accuracy and efficiency of the first dog specifically trained for koala scats.
The detection dog consistently out-performed human-only teams.
Off-leash, the dog detection rate was 100%.
The dog was also 19 times more efficient than current scat survey methods and 153% more accurate (the dog found koala scats where the human-only team did not).
This clearly demonstrates that the use of detection dogs decreases false negatives and survey time, thus allowing for a significant improvement in the quality and quantity of data collection.
Given these unequivocal results, we argue that to improve koala conservation, detection dog surveys for koala scats could in the future replace human-only teams.
Related Results
Overview, Critical Assessment, and Conservation Implications of Koala Distribution and Abundance
Overview, Critical Assessment, and Conservation Implications of Koala Distribution and Abundance
Abstract:
Regional and national surveys provide a broadscale description of the koala's present distribution in Australia. A detailed understanding of its distr...
Campbelltown's koalas: their place in the natural history of Sydney
Campbelltown's koalas: their place in the natural history of Sydney
The first report of a European sighting of a koala was made on 26 January 1798, 10 years after British settlement. It was made south-west of Sydney, near Bargo. The report was not ...
Koalas on Australian Islands
Koalas on Australian Islands
Abstract
Despite substantial conservation and research investments, populations of the endemic and iconic koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) continue to decline across much of ...
Decline of the urban Koala (
Phascolarctos cinereus
) population in Warringah Shire, Sydney
Decline of the urban Koala (
Phascolarctos cinereus
) population in Warringah Shire, Sydney
The Koala population in Warringah Shire has declined over the last 50 years with increasing urbanization. Koalas were reported from various localities throughout the Shire in the 1...
Oxidative stress biomarkers in hypothyroid, non thyroid illness and euthyroid dogs
Oxidative stress biomarkers in hypothyroid, non thyroid illness and euthyroid dogs
Abstract
There are only a few numbers of published reports available on oxidative stress parameters in hypothyroidism and many of which are in the field of human me...
Optimising tool wear and workpiece condition monitoring via cyber-physical systems for smart manufacturing
Optimising tool wear and workpiece condition monitoring via cyber-physical systems for smart manufacturing
Smart manufacturing has been developed since the introduction of Industry 4.0. It consists of resource sharing and networking, predictive engineering, and material and data analyti...
An Analysis of the Conceptual and Connotative Meanings in “Yoram Gross Blinky Bill Michivious Koala” Short Story
An Analysis of the Conceptual and Connotative Meanings in “Yoram Gross Blinky Bill Michivious Koala” Short Story
AbstrakTujuan dari penelitian ini adalah untuk menganalisis makna konseptual dankonotatif yang terdapat pada cerita pendek Yoram Gross Blinky Bill Michivous Koala. Datadalam peneli...
An Analysis of the Conceptual and Connotative Meanings in “Yoram Gross Blinky Bill Michivious Koala” Short Story
An Analysis of the Conceptual and Connotative Meanings in “Yoram Gross Blinky Bill Michivious Koala” Short Story
AbstrakTujuan dari penelitian ini adalah untuk menganalisis makna konseptual dankonotatif yang terdapat pada cerita pendek Yoram Gross Blinky Bill Michivous Koala. Datadalam peneli...

