• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Dog's Best Life

Dog's Best Life

The information you need to keep your dog happy, healthy, playful and loyal.

  • Top Stories
  • Blog
  • What We Do
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Meet Pipit. English springer spaniel tackles big job protecting endangered birds

Posted April 1, 2019

 
Pipit on ship's deck.
Photo courtesy Working Dogs For Conservation

When Pipit searches boats headed for South Georgia Island, she thinks she’s playing a game.

But the one-year-old dog has a critical task. Pipit’s powerful nose is responsible for preventing rats from returning to the remote island near Antarctica.

The newest member of the Working Dogs for Conservation (WD4C) team was selected and trained for that very purpose.

Rats pose threat

The island was declared rodent-free in May 2018 after a massive $13 million, 10-year effort to eradicate rats using baited traps.

The rats first swam to shore in the late 18th century from sinking whaling ships. Because they had no natural predators, the rats thrived on the island and threatened ground-nesting birds.

The rats ate the eggs and chicks of albatrosses, terns, and petrels. They also threatened two of the island’s birds that face extinction. Neither the South Georgia Pipit, a speckled songbird, or the South Georgia Pintail, a brown duck, can be found anywhere else in the world.

Strict biosecurity measures now are used to keep rats from returning. Tourist boats are anchored offshore. Smaller vessels – that are inspected by Pipit, who got her name from the songbird – ferry people to shore.

The project to protect the island is a collaboration between WD4C, Virginia-based Natural Resource Protection Dogs, and the governments of the Falkland Islands and South Georgia & the South Sandwich Islands.

USS Wisconsin Serves as Training Site for Biosecurity Dog

Fun fact of the day: The USS Wisconsin (BB-64) is playing an important role in enhanced biosecurity efforts for South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands.————-Here's the scoop: Working Dogs for Conservation in partnership with Natural Resource Protection Dogs is using the battleship to train a 9-month-old Springer Spaniel, Pipit, on odor detection. Pipit will use her skills to detect rodents in order to prevent them from returning to South Georgia where they harm the bird populations that live there.————-Don't worry…there haven't been any real rodents on-board for the dogs to work with 😉.

Posted by Nauticus on Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Fun and games for Pipit

Megan Vick, the owner of Natural Resource Protection Dogs, said Pipit doesn’t realize she’s working.

“She thinks hunting rats is fun,” Vick said.

Pipit is the first English spring spaniel that Vick has trained.

“She’s a fun challenge,” said Vick, a former Navy cryptologic technician, and conservation officer and canine trainer and handler for the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.

“Her exuberance for life is contagious, she knows only good in life and approaches everything full speed ahead.”

Training conservation dogs

Happy Pipit, an English Springer Spaniel trained to detect rats on ships.
Photo courtesy Working Dogs For Conservation

Pete Coppolillo, executive director of WD4C, said the Montana-based nonprofit trains the world’s best conservation dogs. The organization trains detection dogs because they provide the most efficient, most accurate, and least invasive way to collect crucial conservation data.

Pipit continues the organization’s proud history. Other WD4C dogs have helped find rare gorillas, stop African poachers, and locate destructive Argentine ants.

WD4C has been training dogs for ecological monitoring for about 20 years, Coppolillo said.

The organization started with ecological monitoring, and its dogs helped with projects that counted animals like grizzly bears and wolverines.

About eight years ago, Coppolillo said, the organization started training dogs to help with anti-poaching and anti-trafficking efforts. WD4C’s dogs now work in eight countries.

In the U.S., Canada, and the Falkland Islands, the dogs protect biosecurity by fighting invasive species.

Battling invasive species

Invasive species, like the Argentine ants or zebra mussels, cost the U.S. economy $120 billion per year, Coppolillo said.

Some dogs are trained to find zebra mussels, which have caused the near extinction of many species in the Great Lakes by competing for food and growing on top of and suffocating native clams and mussels. The zebra mussels also coat boats and docks and clog pipes.

Now Pipit has been charged with preventing rats from returning to South Georgia.

“There’s no margin for error,” Coppolillo said. “The glaciers have receded, and if rats were reintroduced, they couldn’t be eradicated again.”

And Pipit’s training and work can be replicated with other dogs to contain other invasive species, Coppolillo said.

WD4C chooses shelter dogs for conservation work. Unlike law enforcement, which trains dogs to locate drugs or explosives, WD4C works to pair dogs with the task that suits them best. Training for WD4C’s detection dogs usually takes four to six months.

“We can tailor the training to what we need each dog to do,” Coppolillo said.

He calls it a win-win-win. The dogs get a suitable job, and the shelters help place dogs. And WD4C gets to add another hard-working member to its team.

“The most common dog in our pack is a mutt,” Coppolillo said. “We want to make this work for these rescue dogs.”

Sara B. HansenSara B. Hansen has spent the past 20-plus years as a professional editor and writer. She’s also the author of The Complete Guide to Cocker Spaniels. She decided to create her dream job by launching Dog’s Best Life. Sara grew up with family dogs, and since she bought her first house, she’s had a furry companion or two to help make it a home. She shares her heart and home with Nutmeg, a Pembroke Welsh Corgi puppy. Her previous dogs: Sydney (September 2008-April 2020), Finley (November 1993-January 2008), and Browning (May 1993-November 2007). You can reach Sara @ [email protected].

 

Related Posts

  • Beagle wearing shirt, tie and glasses while working at computer in office. Apply work lessons from your dog to be more effective.
    Want to be more effective at work? Use 5 lessons from your dog

    Work lessons from your dog: Focus on one task at…

  • dogs boost work productivity
    8 ways dogs boost work productivity

    Dogs boost work productivity by easing stress, inspiring creativity, improving…

  • canine career
    Canine careers: Hardworking dogs thrive with jobs

    A canine career takes advantage of the fact dogs are…

  • dogs in workplace
    5 benefits to creating a dog-friendly workplace

    By creating a dog-friendly workplace, employers make their employees happier,…

  • Medical science harnesses the power of dog noses

    Medical science harnesses the power of dog noses to detect…

  • dog nose
    Why does my dog stick his nose there?

    A dog nose has between 200-250 million scent receptors. People…

Share this post:

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Pinterest Share on Email Share on Reddit

Filed Under: Dog Breeds, Dog Training, Home Page Tagged With: Working dogs

« Previous Post
Next Post »

Primary Sidebar

Follow Us

Categories

  • Adoption
  • Dog Breeds
  • Dog Facts
  • Dog Fun
  • Dog Grooming
  • Dog Health
  • Dog Inspirations
  • Dog Training
  • Dog Travel
  • Holidays
  • Home Page
  • Puppies
  • Top Stories

Featured Posts

  • Tricolor Australian shepherd in front of white background. Take steps to stop dog pawing.

    Dog behavior: Understand pawing

  • puppy bite

    5 tips to stop puppy biting

  • puppy 101

    Puppy training 101: 7 tips to start your dog off right

Tags

Dog health insurance Boston Terrier First-time dog owner Dog-safe plants dog age Driving Dog tail Fourth of July Environment Arthritis German shepherd Dog teeth Jumping Golden retriever Shedding Healthy weight Dog grief Quarantine Dog body language Babies Dog safety Dog sounds Old dogs howling Rescue dog Hip dysplasia Dog clothes Pit bull Cats Dependent dog breeds

Footer

Quick Links

  • Home
  • Top Stories
  • Blog
  • What We Do
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Recent Posts

  • Is a Shih Tzu the right dog for you?
    The most prominent feature of the Shih Tzu is their luxurious hair, which requires grooming to prevent eye and ear infections. […]
  • Is a Great Pyrenees the right dog for you?
    The Great Pyrenees is territorial and protective. They also are nocturnal and have a keen sense of hearing. […]
  • 7 foods dogs should avoid eating
    Be aware of foods your dog should avoid eating because they are toxic and could potentially cause choking, weakness, or death.  […]
  • 10 tips to save money on pet supplies
    Check our list of the top 10 ways to save money on pet supplies so you can enjoy your animal companion for less. […]

Get Our Newsletter

Get more news to help keep your dog healthy delivered right to your inbox. Sign up for DogsBestLife.com's monthly newsletter.

© Copyright 2021 Dog's Best Life online magazine · All Rights Reserved · Privacy
Get Our Free Monthly Newsletter

Get more news to help keep your dog healthy delivered right to your inbox. Sign up for DogsBestLife.com's monthly newsletter.