All of a sudden we have a working protocol for running down the poaching problem for all of Africa. This is highly effective.
Today all African governments are engaged in this problem. Plenty of resources are deployed with little success. Using these trained dogs can drive poaching out of business.
I also see that the Chinese Government is now aggressively shutting down the ivory trade. This is an end to lip service.
So slowly and somewhat painfully the whole problem of global wildlife management is been resolved. We are really living through its true beginnings here...
Texas Pack Hounds Charge to the Rescue for Rhinos in South Africa, Nabbing 145 Poachers So Far
(EnviroNews World News)
— Kruger National Park, South Africa — Between 2008 and 2018, poachers
killed about 4,000 rhinos in South Africa’s Kruger National Park and its
surrounding private reserves. These thugs typically take only the horn
to sell for unfounded medicinal use in Asia. They oftentimes leave the
still-living rhinos to die — some choking on their own blood while the
outlaws make their getaway.
In years past, Kruger used man-dog pairs to track the poachers, but
the teams were too slow, failing to catch the brazen bandits because the
dogs had to remain on a leash. South African National Parks, which
oversees Kruger, knew it needed a different approach with the rhino
population dwindling toward extinction. They asked the Southern African
Wildlife College (SAWC) to look into pack dog programs.
“Building a pack dog team is a massive undertaking,” Theresa Sowry, CEO of SAWC, told National Geographic
in an interview. “You need the right genetics, the right training, and,
most importantly, the right mindset to bring it all together.” Kruger
wanted to test free-running pack dogs but didn’t have the resources to
allocate to the project.
That changed in 2017 when Ivan Carter, Founder of the Ivan Carter
Wildlife Conservation Alliance, stepped in to help finance the project.
“We had no idea if free-running dogs would work for anti-poaching
purposes in Africa.” So, Carter introduced Sowry to Texan and dog
breeder Joe Braman in an effort to find out.
Braman, a rancher and law enforcement officer, grew up breeding
free-running American coonhounds and training them to hunt in packs with
his father. Sowry visited Braman in Texas to see the dogs in action.
Braman demonstrated the capability of his pack hounds by using a
person in a tackle suit as the target. The pack split up and competed
with each other, scrambling to be the first to find the target’s scent.
Once they picked up the smell, the pack chased the person, who went up a
tree, where he was then surrounded. Sowry was suitably impressed and
invited Braman to South Africa.
“I was just going to go over and do an evaluation and help them train
a few dogs,” he remembers. But it turned into a lot more than that.
Implementing the program wasn’t all smooth sailing though. Braman met
Kruger’s Lead Dog Trainer Johan Van Staaten, who had a different,
gentler philosophy on how a canine should be handled all together. But
Braman still believed aggressive dogs were the key to solving the
poacher problem.
“It’s all about intimidation,” Braman said at the time. “If a dog
starts attacking you, the first thing you’re going to do is throw the
gun and climb a tree.”
Van Staaten wasn’t comfortable with Braman’s training techniques or
results though. He had never trained his dogs to attack, and believes in
a more natural training technique that allows the animal to find what
it likes to do and is suited for.
“They’re really hard on their dogs. They work with whips. Shouting at
dogs — shocking them if they don’t do the right thing,” said Van
Staaten. “[The dogs] have to want to work.”
After watching a video of a rhino aspirating on its own blood, Braman
decided the South African training process was too slow. He went back
to Texas to train dogs. When Van Staaten joined him, he found aggressive
dogs that were biting the human decoy so hard it was leaving bruises
under the protective outfit. Van Staaten called Sowry and told her what
was going on. “‘Do we really want to go this way?” he asked. “We are
going to kill people!” After some discussion, Braman agreed the training
might be too intense.
“I was training dogs to be mean. And I mean ‘mean,’ dude! I wanted to
send a message to the poachers… I was allowing the emotion of the
[rhino] video to dictate how we trained the dogs,” Braman admitted. “We
pulled back a bit.” He spent two more months working with the dogs and
then sent them to South Africa, and the rest is history.
So far, the dogs that Braman trained in Texas have helped apprehend
54 percent of the known poachers in Kruger — a marked improvement from
the three to five percent of their standard K-9 units. Through September
2019, the dogs had helped capture 145 poachers and 53 guns.
Men and dogs work as a team with helicopters protecting the dogs from
predators and armed men protecting the dogs from gunfire. “It’s a
high-risk job for human and dog,” Van Staaten told NatGeo. “But with training and with standard operating procedures, we try to minimize the risk.”
South Africa and the rhinos aren’t the only beneficiaries of the new
dog training techniques either. Braman is now teaching man’s best friend
to combat human trafficking in the U.S. and successfully using animals
that don’t bite.
“I learned a lot in Africa,” he said. “When I got there, I just
wanted control. I had to learn patience. I had to collaborate. And it
made me a better person.”
According to National Geographic, there are about 20,000 southern white rhinos (Ceratotherium simum) left in the wild and just over 5,000 black rhinos (Diceros bicornis).
South Africa has approximately 80 percent of the wild rhino population
within its borders. According to the World Wildlife Federation (WWF),
western black rhinos (Diceros bicornis longipes) have recently gone extinct, while only three northern white rhinos (Ceratotherium simum cottoni)
are left – all of which are females leaving no possibility of a natural
breeding. All three live in Kenya, where they are kept under 24-hour
guard.
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