Abstract

Key messageThe dog detection allows timely removal by sanitation logging of first beetle-attacked trees before offspring emergence, preventing local beetle increases. Detection dogs rapidly learned responding to synthetic bark beetle pheromone components, with known chemical titres, allowing search training during winter in laboratory and field. Dogs trained on synthetics detected naturally attacked trees in summer at a distance of > 100 m.ContextAn early detection of first beetle-attacked trees would allow timely sanitation felling before offspring emergence, curbing local beetle increase.AimsWe tested if detection dogs, trained off-season on synthetic pheromone components from Ips typographus, could locate naturally bark beetle–infested spruce trees.MethodsIndoor training allowed dogs to discriminate between the infestation odours (target) and natural odours (non-target) from the forest. Odour stimuli were shown by chemical analysis to be bioactive at extremely low-levels released (< 10−4 ng/15 min) in the laboratory.ResultsDetection dogs, trained to recognise four different synthetic pheromone compounds in the wintertime, were able to detect naturally infested spruce trees unknown to humans the following summer. The dog-handler pairs were able to detect an infested spruce tree from the first hours of beetle attack until several weeks after first attack, long before discolouration of the crown. Trained sniffer dogs detected infested spruce trees out to ≥ 100 m, as measured by GPS-collar tracks.ConclusionDog-handler pairs appear to be more efficient than humans alone in timely detecting bark beetle infestations due to the canine’s ability to cover a greater area and detect by olfaction infestations from a far longer distance than can humans.

Highlights

  • Detection dogs are used to locate many objects including humans, explosives, and illicit drugs

  • 2 days later, we found that most stimuli titres, still well biologically active, decreased to below the limit of quantification (LOQ)

  • While it is probably possible to train a detection dog to locate spruces that have been attacked by bark beetles by just letting the dog sniff an attacked spruce and reward the dog, such a ‘natural’ method will not teach a dog to recognise the different kinds of semiochemicals the bark beetle releases over the course of an attack

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Summary

Introduction

Detection dogs are used to locate many objects including humans, explosives, and illicit drugs (see Browne et al 2006 and references therein; Lorenzo et al 2003). Trained canines have been used to detect invasive organisms (Goodwin et al 2010; Hoyer-Tomiczek et al 2016) as well as endangered species (reviewed by Beebe et al 2016). Canines have been trained to detect small or cryptic insects such as termites (Brooks et al 2003), palm weevils (Nakash et al 2000; Suma et al 2014), bed bugs (Pfiester et al 2008; Vaidyanathan and Feldlaufer 2013), and endangered Coleoptera (Mosconi et al 2017). The key benefits of using trained detection dogs are their keen sense of smell (Hepper and Wells 2015) and their ability to cover large areas in a shorter time when compared with humans Biological material is used for the training (Johnen et al 2013)

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