Some new employees of the Missouri Department of Conservation work for kibble.
The department officially commissioned five canine officers May 21, after nine weeks of training in Indiana.
鈥淪ometimes folks think of law enforcement dogs as apprehension dogs that chase people down. That is absolutely not what our program is about,鈥 said Capt. Russell Duckworth of the department鈥檚 protection division.
Instead, the dogs 鈥 three labs and two German short-haired pointers 鈥 will be mostly used for tracking.
鈥淭hink of finding a lost child, or a senior adult,鈥 Duckworth said. 鈥淎lso, these are going to help us find articles that may have been discarded, maybe a firearm that was used in the commission of a wildlife crime.鈥
The dogs can also be trained to sniff out endangered or invasive species, like the zebra mussel. Duckworth said they鈥檒l also make a number of educational appearances.
Duckworth said their ability to pick up scents will shorten investigations that used to take hours. For example, he said, as a young conservation officer in southeast Missouri, he would come across a truck parked far back on logging roads. That was an indication of ginseng harvesting, which is
But in order to investigate, he said, he and other conservation officers would have to sit and wait for hours for people to come out of the woods.
鈥淎nd oftentimes, they will leave what they have found out in the woods because they know that it鈥檚 illegal,鈥 Duckworth said. 鈥淲ith a dog, you can show up to that same vehicle parked in the middle of the woods and the dog can pick up the scent of the humans that left the vehicle, and it can go to each place that that person has been, any tools, any dug ginseng that they have discovered.鈥
The dogs are part of the conservation department鈥檚 regular budget, though private companies such as Purina and Diamond Pet Foods helped sponsor the training and are donating dog food.
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