Sniffer dogs help Mexico fight the flesh-eating screwworm
TECAMAC, Mexico - With tail wagging, tongue out and ears perked, Hummer - a young mixed breed dog with a slick black coat - sits down in front of a sample of screwworm scent, promptly accepting praise and treats from his handler.
Trained to detect the smell of screwworm, a flesh-eating pest that has infected Mexico's cattle herd and disrupted livestock trade with the United States, Hummer and his canine colleagues offer a glimmer of hope in controlling the worm.
At a government-run training center about an hour outside Mexico City, officials from a special unit of the country's health safety agency Senasica run a three-month intensive training program for a select group of dogs to sniff out screwworm and other pests or diseases in live animals or agricultural products.
Most of the dogs are rescued from shelters, allowing animals that may have been abandoned for being too difficult to find a new life. Feisty pups that steal food from the table, never calm down and have a relentless desire to play are the perfect candidates.
"Sometimes what people don't want is the ideal for us," said Cesar Dangu, head of the canine training center Ceacan. "We also have to look for other qualities: that they don't get angry, they are affectionate, they can live with people and with other animals."
Not all dogs respond to the aroma of screwworm, a pest that infests livestock and wildlife and carries maggots that burrow into the skin of living animals, causing serious and often fatal damage.
Some dogs will refuse to approach the aroma, Dangu said, making those that take to it even more valuable in their task.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore ST will have Govt's 'full confidence and support' in its mission to stay relevant: PM Wong
Singapore ST will aim to become an indispensable partner to S'pore's communities: ST editor
Singapore Nuclear safety research gets boost with new institute, $66m funding as S'pore weighs energy viability
Singapore Man who killed 5-year-old daughter gets life sentence after he appeals against 35-year jail term
Singapore Judge declines to void alleged sham marriage in S'pore, says it is for Parliament to decide
Business OCBC CEO Helen Wong to retire on Dec 31; Tan Teck Long named successor
Singapore More than 14,300 people checked during 7-week-long anti-crime ops
Singapore S'porean who defaulted on NS obligations used fake Malaysian passports at checkpoints over 800 times
After cases started emerging in Mexico, the U.S. closed its southern border to imports of certain livestock, including cattle, in May before a gradual reopening began this week.
On Wednesday, however, the U.S. government once again closed the border to cattle after a new case of screwworm was detected in Veracruz state, about 370 miles (595 km) south of the U.S. border, a decision Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum called "exaggerated."
On a sunny afternoon at Ceacan, just hours after the border closure announcement, the work of the dogs took on new urgency.
There are only six screwworm-sniffing dogs working at a livestock border passage in the southern state of Chiapas, which borders Guatemala, the heart of Mexico's screwworm infestation.
Havana, a two-year-old Shepherd mix, practices detecting screwworm on cow-sized equipment inside a greenhouse, a training exercise meant to mimic the sweltering heat the dogs must tolerate in Chiapas, said instructor Mayte Tontle.
"We want our dogs to adapt as much as possible to the real-life conditions," Tontle said.
With at least 47 new cases of screwworm detected daily in Mexico, according to government data, the handful of highly trained canines are a small element of Mexico's response, which also includes a $51 million facility in Chiapas to produce sterile flies to reduce the reproducing population of the wild flies.
The plant, with a hefty $21 million investment from the U.S., is expected to be ready in the first half of 2026.
The dogs trained at Ceacan will work until they complete eight years on the job or turn 10 years old, whichever comes first.
After that, they retire.
"I would say 99% of the dogs are adopted by their handler. There is an unbreakable link because of the love between the handler and the dog," Dangu said. REUTERS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
13 hours ago
- Straits Times
Kamchatka quake may have caused volcano's eruption after 600 years, Russia says
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The overnight eruption of the Krasheninnikov Volcano in Kamchatka, its first in 600 years, may be connected to the huge earthquake that rocked Russia's Far East last week , Russia's RIA state news agency and scientists reported on Aug 3. 'This is the first historically confirmed eruption of Krasheninnikov Volcano in 600 years,' RIA cited Ms Olga Girina, head of the Kamchatka Volcanic Eruption Response Team, as saying. She added that the eruption may be connected to the earthquake on July 30 that triggered tsunami warnings as far away as French Polynesia and Chile, and was followed by an eruption of Klyuchevskoy, the most active volcano on the Kamchatka Peninsula. On the Telegram channel of the Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, Ms Girina said that Krasheninnikov's last lava effusion took place on 1463 - plus/minus 40 years - and no eruption has been known since. The Kamchatka branch of Russia's ministry for emergency services said that an ash plume rising up to 6,000m has been recorded following the volcano's eruption. The volcano itself stands at 1,856m. 'The ash cloud has drifted eastward, toward the Pacific Ocean. There are no populated areas along its path,' the ministry said on Telegram. The eruption of the volcano has been assigned an orange aviation code, indicating a heightened risk to aircraft, the ministry said. REUTERS

Straits Times
2 days ago
- Straits Times
Chinese-Canadian fantasy author Ai Jiang says ‘biculturalism is a work in progress'
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox A Palace Near The Wind is the first of the Natural Engines fantasy duology by Canadian-Chinese author Ai Jiang. SINGAPORE – Toronto-based author Ai Jiang has a theory about why so many readers are gravitating towards Asian science fiction and fantasy. Not for her grand debates about how genre silos are collapsing or the perceived stuffiness of more realist literary fiction.

Straits Times
2 days ago
- Straits Times
Artificial sweetener consumption linked to less effective cancer treatment: Study
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox In the study, high consumption of sucralose was linked with lower effectiveness of immunotherapies across a range of cancer types, stages and treatment methods. In patients with melanoma or non-small cell lung cancer, consuming high levels of the artificial sweetener sucralose contributes to diminished responses to immunotherapy and poorer survival, researchers reported in Cancer Discovery. When the researchers had 132 patients with advanced melanoma or non-small cell lung cancer answer detailed diet history questionnaires, they found that high consumption of sucralose was linked with lower effectiveness of immunotherapies across a range of cancer types, stages and treatment methods. In experiments with mice, the researchers found that sucralose shifts the composition of microbes in the intestines, increasing bacterial species that degrade arginine, an amino acid that is essential for key immune cells called T cells. 'When arginine levels were depleted due to sucralose-driven shifts in the microbiome, T cells couldn't function properly,' study leader Abby Overacre of the University of Pittsburgh said in a statement. 'As a result, immunotherapy wasn't as effective in mice that were fed sucralose.' Laying the groundwork for a solution to the problem, the same researchers also found in the mice that supplements that boosted levels of arginine mitigated the negative effects of sucralose on immunotherapy, an approach they now hope to test in humans. 'It's easy to say 'stop drinking diet soda', but when patients are being treated for cancer, they are already dealing with enough, so asking them to drastically alter their diet may not be realistic,' Assistant Professor Overacre said. 'That's why it's so exciting that arginine supplementation could be a simple approach to counteract the negative effects of sucralose on immunotherapy.' REUTERS