2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0964-8305(01)00109-3
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Sustained evaluation of the effectiveness of detector dogs for locating brown tree snakes in cargo outbound from Guam

Abstract: The accidental introduction of the brown tree snake Boiga irregularis to Guam has resulted in the extirpation of most of the island's native terrestrial vertebrates, has created a health hazard to infants and children, and has resulted in economic losses. The high brown tree snake population densities on Guam, the species' adaptations for successful dispersal, and Guam's position as a focal point for commercial and military cargo shipments have created a high level of concern that brown tree snakes could sprea… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Researchers have successfully used detector dogs to locate chelonians (Cablk and Heaton 2006) and there may be promise in using these animals to find snakes (Engeman et al 2002). There are a myriad of methods and techniques for catching and studying snakes (Fitch 2001;Dorcas and Willson 2009) and the cumulative or comparative efforts of different techniques employed intensively are likely to be useful in raising detection rates.…”
Section: Additional Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Researchers have successfully used detector dogs to locate chelonians (Cablk and Heaton 2006) and there may be promise in using these animals to find snakes (Engeman et al 2002). There are a myriad of methods and techniques for catching and studying snakes (Fitch 2001;Dorcas and Willson 2009) and the cumulative or comparative efforts of different techniques employed intensively are likely to be useful in raising detection rates.…”
Section: Additional Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The interaction between dog and handler is complex making it impossible to precisely determine in the latter case whether: 1) the snake wasn't detected by the dog, 2) the dog detected the snake but did not respond, or 3) the handler did not recognize the dog's response. Continued testing found fewer missed snakes were due to insufficient search patterns (Engeman et al, 2002). As training has progressed over the intervening years, training tests with planted BTS have seen steady improvements in detection rates to 81%e93%.…”
Section: Detector-dog Inspections Of Cargomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The efficacy of dog teams for locating stowed BTS was investigated by planting live BTS (in escape-proof containers) in cargo without the knowledge of handlers responsible for inspecting the cargo (Engeman et al, 1998d(Engeman et al, , 2002. This percentage was likely a conservative estimate for detection of BTS naturally entering cargo for a couple reasons.…”
Section: Detector-dog Inspections Of Cargomentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Several authors suggest that the best parameters to describe the ability of conservation dogs in correctly locating their target are the overall percentage of correct indications and the percentage of correctly detected targets for the total number of targets (Wallner and Ellis 1976,Welch 1990, Engeman et al 2002, Brooks et al 2003, Cablk and Heaton 2006, Long et al 2007, Richards et al 2008, Gsell et al 2010, Lin et al 2011, Waters et al 2011, Suma et al 2014, Hoyer-Tomiczek et al 2016. Although these parameters are often characterised by different names, for this work, the definition used by Allouche et al (2006) was adopted in relation to the assessment of presence-absence predictive models i.e.…”
Section: Dog Breed and Trainingmentioning
confidence: 99%