2024
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10866
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Conservation detection dogs: A critical review of efficacy and methodology

Beth McKeague,
Caroline Finlay,
Nicola Rooney

Abstract: Conservation detection dogs (CDD) use their exceptional olfactory abilities to assist a wide range of conservation projects through the detection of target specimens or species. CDD are generally quicker, can cover wider areas and find more samples than humans and other analytical tools. However, their efficacy varies between studies; methodological and procedural standardisation in the field is lacking. Considering the cost of deploying a CDD team and the limited financial resources within conservation, it is… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 143 publications
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“…The use of dogs as a tool in wildlife monitoring and management is diverse. Scat detection dogs are employed across the western regions for noninvasive genetic sampling (McKeague et al., 2024 ; Wasser et al., 2004 ) and livestock guardian dogs are used to mitigate human‐carnivore conflict through livestock protection (Andelt & Hopper, 2000 ; Young & Sarmento, 2024 ). Dogs are also used for hazing nuisance black bears in urban settings (Beckmann et al., 2004 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of dogs as a tool in wildlife monitoring and management is diverse. Scat detection dogs are employed across the western regions for noninvasive genetic sampling (McKeague et al., 2024 ; Wasser et al., 2004 ) and livestock guardian dogs are used to mitigate human‐carnivore conflict through livestock protection (Andelt & Hopper, 2000 ; Young & Sarmento, 2024 ). Dogs are also used for hazing nuisance black bears in urban settings (Beckmann et al., 2004 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%