March 10th, 2014 Pys.org
South African
conservationists announced that they have enlisted the help of a Belgian
Shepherd dog to help track the country's most endangered land-based
tortoise.
Two-year-old Brin is the first dog to help with animal
tracking and conservation in South Africa , said Justin Lawrence
of the group CapeNature.
After six months of training the dog started working
full time late last year, tracking down and detecting the geometric tortoise.
Brin's work helps with monitoring, population
estimates and in search and rescue operations. It is estimated that
there are only a few hundred such tortoises left in the wild.
"This is very new in South
Africa ," said Lawrence .
It is the "first live target conservation detection work of its kind ever
done in South Africa ".
The geometric tortoise, which sports a bright yellow
and black shell, is found only in the low-lying shrublands of South Africa 's Western Cape
province .
It faces threats from wheat and wine farming, as well
as urban development that have eaten into more than 90 percent of its remaining
habitat.
It is now the third most endangered land tortoise
in the world, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature,
and is among the top 25 most endangered tortoises and freshwater turtles
species in the world.
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