
How dogs sniffing out poop could help to save koalas
Max makes an unlikely conservation worker, and not just because he's a dog.
He's also bred for hunting. But instead, the English Springer Spaniel is using his supercharged sense of smell to sniff out koala scat in a bid to help save the iconic Australian animal.
Koalas are native to Australia and in 2022 the government listed them as endangered on most of the country's east coast. By some estimates, their numbers have halved in the last 20 years, due to a number of threats including habitat reduction, disease, drought and fires.
When Max discovers koala droppings, he lays down with the find between his front paws and nudges at it with his nose, says Jack Nesbitt, of Canines for Wildlife, which trains dogs for conservation-related tasks. Max is rewarded with his favorite treat – a tennis ball.
The scat provides a trove of valuable information. Analysis in the lab can tell ecologists if the koala has diseases like chlamydia, which can cause blindness and infertility, and is now common among koalas.
Genetic analysis can also show how a koala is related to others around it, and how it's moving through a habitat. 'We're able to identify individual koalas from their poos,' says Nesbitt, who founded Canines for Wildlife with his parents.
In late 2024, Max identified a new group of koalas inland of Coffs Harbor, a coastal city between Sydney and Brisbane, which, significantly, appeared to be chlamydia free.
The biggest threat to koalas is the destruction of habitat by clearing land for agriculture, housing, mining and forestry, according to the findings of a parliamentary inquiry released in 2020. It also said that without 'urgent government intervention' koalas will go extinct before 2050 in New South Wales, and that a government estimate that 36,000 koalas remain in New South Wales is 'outdated and unreliable.'
Land clearing can reduce food sources for koalas, who are picky eaters surviving mainly on poisonous eucalypt species, which they have adapted to digest, and occasionally other related plants. Habitat loss can also isolate a koala from potential mates, and crossing roads or the backyards of homes exposes them to risks like vehicles and pet dogs.
Climate change poses another threat, not least from the increased risk of wildfires. At least 5,000 koalas were killed in New South Wales by bushfires in the 2019 to 2020 season, according to the parliamentary inquiry.
The government has committed tens of millions of dollars to create a 315,000-hectare Great Koala National Park. According to conservationists, logging continues within its proposed boundaries. A spokesperson for the New South Wales government told CNN that while work to establish the park is carried out, the government has directed forestry operations to stop in areas being assessed for the park which are hubs for 'critical multi-generational resident koalas and their habitats.'
Canines for Wildlife doesn't engage in advocacy, but it says some groups use its data to show the usage and importance of areas at risk of logging, in the hopes of influencing the state government's decision around what forest will be protected.
Nesbitt says that groups like city councils use Canines for Wildlife's data when making planning decisions; the organization is now working on another project in a different area of Coffs Harbor, which has one of the largest koala populations in New South Wales.
'Finding those areas of habitat that are the most important for protection, and being able to identify that with evidence, is probably the most important impact they could have,' says Nesbitt, of the dogs.
Stuart Blanch, of WWF-Australia, tells CNN that koala detection methods have evolved in recent decades to get a more accurate estimate of koala occupancy in an area. Once, conservationists relied on methods like listening for koalas – they make loud bellowing and growling noises – or using a spotlight at night to spot shining eyes.
Today, methods like drone monitoring and using dogs for scat detection have become more popular, though those options are more expensive.
Dogs detecting scat have some benefits over drones, he adds. They can detect the presence of a koala after it has moved on, and in places with thick foliage that drones might not be able to see into.
Canines for Wildlife dogs have done work with other species, like the endangered Hastings River mouse, and the organization is currently training dogs to detect the Kroombit Tinker frog, which is critically endangered.
Although dogs might not seem like natural conservationists, Nesbitt says they're the perfect tool to have in an ecologist's toolkit. He adds: 'Their ability to see the world through their nose, is a sensor that we just don't have access to in any other way.'

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New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Inside the battle to control the world's supply of rare earths
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'The US was concerned about the environmental impact, since particularly with the technology of the time, there were significant impacts to air, water and even ground quality that would not have met US standards,' says Sanderson. It wasn't the same story in China, who were more willing to accept the dangerous pollutants 'as a price for achieving its market dominance,' she says. China's monopoly of rare earths doesn't just give them an economic advantage. 'China has been 'weaponizing' its market hegemony for many years, in increasingly sophisticated and legal ways,' says Sanderson. 10 Pres. Trump with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Having conceded its lead on rare earth mining, the US is playing a serious game of catch-up with the Chinese. REUTERS The country first flexed their power in 2010, blocking rare earth exports to Japan, a major producer of permanent metal magnets. 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Kennedy believes that if left unchecked, and China was allowed to continue their embargo without consequences, 'the non-Chinese world would need to shut down and re-engineer most everything that comes off an assembly line,' says Kennedy. 'This is not an overstatement.' The stand-off with China may be at the forefront, but it's not the only way Trump is maneuvering to protect the nation from rare earth depletion. Greenland contains (by some estimates) about a quarter of the world's rare earth minerals, and Trump has suggested that the US could annex the autonomous territory in Denmark. 10 A chunk of Ytrium, once of the most important rare earth elements. Phil Degginger/imageBROKER/Shutterstock The US also recently inked a landmark deal with Ukraine, which has approximately 5% of the total global mineral reserves. 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Soonthorn – It took half a century for China to achieve its market position, she says, and the US needs an integrated supply chain from mine to magnet, but we're essentially starting from scratch. The US also needs to reform its mining regulatory system, which has a dysfunctional permitting process and some of the longest lead times for new mine production in the world. 'On average, companies wait anywhere from eight to fifteen years from when a deposit is initially determined to be economically interesting to when production can start,' says Sanderson, 'and some have waited significantly longer than that.' New mining projects are also frequently litigated, 'multiple times from multiple angles,' says Sanderson, which can add even more years to the wait time. 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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
How far you walk may be more important than speed to fix chronic back pain
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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
These 12 Fruits and Vegetables Have the Most Pesticides — Does Your Family Eat Them?
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