By - Miguel Llanos
Category - Animation
Source - http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com
Source - http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/06/12071751-dog-gets-starring-role-in-study-on-what-stresses-killer-whales?lite
Category - Animation
Source - http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com
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| Animation |
A new study on endangered Pacific Northwest killer whales is getting
noticed not just for its findings -- less salmon to eat is a much bigger
stress factor than whale watching boats -- but for who helped out:
namely, a black Labrador trained to detect killer whale scat.
Cited
as "the dog" in the peer-reviewed study, Tucker is credited with
allowing researchers to get a better sampling of the resident killer
whales in waters off Washington state and Canada's British Columbia
while monitoring from a distance.
"We debated about naming
Tucker," lead researcher Katherine Ayres told msnbc.com, "but decided it
was more 'scientific' to say 'the dog'.
"We also wanted this to
be a general method that could be applied with other dogs in the future
so we didn't want to make it too specific," she added. "However, you
will see that he has a big -- and much deserved -- shout out in the
acknowledgements."
Indeed, after thanking numerous humans, the authors concluded with:
"Special thanks go to Tucker, the Conservation Canine, for his keen nose
and assistance with non-invasive fecal sampling."
He did that with a nose trained to appreciate the scent of scat from killer whales, also known as orcas, up to a mile away.
"Use
of a detection dog enabled us to sample at an average distance of 400
meters from the target whale(s), minimizing any potential disturbance
from the research vessel," the researchers wrote in the study published Wednesday in PLoS One.
Prior
to Tucker, researchers had to closely follow orca pods to find and
collect scat samples. But that may lead to shy orcas staying away from
research boats, Ayres said, making for a less representative sampling of
the population.
With Tucker, "we were not influenced to follow
whales that are naturally charismatic" to humans, such as large males or
mothers with calves, said Ayres, a pet-behavior consultant who led the
research while a University of Washington doctoral student in biology.
The scat was used to detect hormones released by "southern resident
killer whales," a population listed as endangered due to low numbers in
recent years. Levels of thyroid hormones, which slowly regulate
metabolism based on food availability, showed the orcas were best fed
when first arriving in the Salish Sea off the coast of Washington and
British Columbia.
The researchers also found that fast-acting
stress hormones known as glucocorticoids, which are triggered by
immediate danger and food stress, did not spike when whale watching
boats reached their annual peak around the orcas.
"As Chinook salmon increased, stress levels went down," said Ayres.
The
study did, however, find a cumulative impact from vessels on stress.
"Say the only place in town to eat is a noisy/crowded bar," Ayres said
by way of analogy. "If that bar has all the food you like and plenty of
it, you might not be that bothered by the noise. However, if you are
starving and the buffet only has rice and potatoes, you might start to
notice the noisiness more and you might become more stressed by it."
Source - http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/06/12071751-dog-gets-starring-role-in-study-on-what-stresses-killer-whales?lite

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