From surrender to crop saver, rescue dog sniffs out invasive disease in canola fields - Action News
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From surrender to crop saver, rescue dog sniffs out invasive disease in canola fields

Two dogs from New Brunswick are now trained to find a destructive root disease in Alberta canola fields one was a hyperactive surrender dog that may have had a hard time finding a new home.

A New Brunswick goldendoodle got a second chance and the smart sniffer is now nailing it in Alberta

This goldendoodle was surrendered in New Brunwick. Now the dog has been trained to detect the destructive clubroot disease in Alberta canola fields. (Farming Smarter)

Two dogs from New Brunswick are now trained to find a destructive root disease in Alberta canola fields one was a hyperactive surrender dog that may have had a hard time finding a new home.

An Alberta Agriculture and Forestry scientist says recent clubroot detection training has shown impressive results with the two dogs involvedexcelling.

"The German shepherd fit the criteria of being a young, highly active dog," Michael Harding said.

"The goldendoodle was a rescue animal ... it's now one of the only two dogs in the world that can do this."

Clubroot-detecting dogs

5 years ago
Duration 5:58
Clubroot-detecting dogs

This, being trained to find clubroot in Alberta canola fields.

"It can be very damaging," Harding said.

"When the soil gets infested with the disease to a certain level, you have to stop growing canola for an extended period of time."

Harding partnered with a dog trainer from the Maritimes, the two training dogs and a research group called Farming Smarter, after Harding followed a study of dogs detecting disease on avocados in Florida.

Clubroot disease can be destructive to canola crops. (Farming Smarter)

"Dogs live in a world of scent. They detect things in levels like parts per trillion. Our most sensitive scientific instruments can't do that," Harding said.

He says that is similar to one drop of liquid in a volume of water that could fill 20 Olympic-sized swimming pools.

"Their ability to detect things is just astonishing. They are mobile, they can get into small spaces," he said.

This German shepherd was chosen for the project because of age and activity levels. (Farming Smarter)

In clinical trials, the dogs achieve perfection in detection. But Alberta fields have different smells and rodents to deal with, so when the New Brunswick dogs hit their first field, there were hiccups.

"There were a lot of distractions and additional scents. It didn't go seamlessly, it took some additional adaptations in those new conditions, but they nailed it."

The next step is training the dogs to detect the clubroot spores. Those spores can spread the disease rapidly and remain on a field for up to 15 years, he said.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story stated one of the dogs was scheduled to be euthanized, based on a direct quote. The former owner of that dog disputes that point, saying she would not have surrendered the animal if euthanasia was an option. The headline and story text have been changed to reflect that.
    Nov 07, 2019 3:07 PM MT

With files from CBC Calgary News at 6