Smugglers of pangolins,I Would Rather Kill You elephant tusks and rhino horn, meet your match: the sniffing rats.
Conservationists in Tanzania are training the rodents to smell trafficked animal parts and illegal timber in shipments from Africa to Asia.
The fledgling program aims to harness rats' keen sense of smell to combat the rampant global trade in illegal goods. Scaly pangolins, elephants and rhinos are facing extinction as poachers hunt more of them down for parts and meat.
SEE ALSO: Pangolins, the world's most trafficked mammals, get major boost in battle against extinctionAPOPO, a Belgian non-profit group involved in the project, has worked for years with African giant pouched rats. Their rodents learn to sniff out mines on old battlefields in Angola, Mozambique and Cambodia, or to detect tuberculosis in phlegm samples from patients in Tanzania and Mozambique.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service awarded $100,000 to the new anti-poaching effort as part of the Obama administration's broader $1.2 million initiative to combat illegal wildlife trafficking.
The grants "support projects on the ground where wildlife trafficking is decimating some of the Earth's most cherished and most unusual species," Dan Ashe, the agency's director, said in an October statement.
Endangered Wildlife Trust, a South African organization, is spearheading the latest rat-sniffing initiative with APOPO. The pilot project will begin by rearing 10 to 15 rodents in Tanzania.
The rats, only a few weeks old right now, will begin with "socialization training," which includes riding on people's shoulders and sitting in their pockets to get used to sights and sounds, James Pursey, APOPO's spokesman, told the Associated Press.
Next up: "click and reward" training. The trainers feed rats a treat whenever the rodents hear a clicking sound, so that rats will eventually associate the scent of pangolins and other animals with edible rewards.
Finally, trainers will reduce the intensity of animal scents and mix in other smells to confuse the rats, leading them to scratch or linger over a certain site. In the real world, this behavior would tip off handlers to a possible find.
The pilot project will initially focus on illegal hardwood timber and pangolins, which are believed to be the most trafficked animals in the world. Pangolin scales are a common ingredient in traditional Asian medicines, and their meat is considered a delicacy in parts of Vietnam and China.
Organizers said they next hope to train the rats to find smuggled elephant ivory and rhino horn.
If all goes according to plan, the pangolin-sniffing rats could finally get to work in about a year or so. APOPO's Pursey told the AP that the rodents will stick to perusing cargo rather than people's personal luggage.
Travelers wouldn't be "particularly enamored" to have rats crawling all over their belongings, he said.
Associated Press contributed reporting.
Topics Sustainability
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Samsung The Frame deal: Get up to 40% off at Samsung
PSG vs. Liverpool 2025 livestream: Watch Champions League for free
Bayern Munich vs. Leverkusen 2025 livestream: Watch Champions League for free
The Dark Web: What is It and How To Access It
Razer Kishi V2 deal: Snag one for 50% off
Apple iPhone 16e doesn't have MagSafe, but there's a fix
Earth sends Cassini a whole lot of love after the mission comes to a bittersweet end
Why are TikTok comments suddenly full of religious messages?
'Severance' Reddit theory may have answered the 'Cold Harbor' mystery
Elon Musk says SpaceX will launch the Falcon Heavy 'in a week or so'
Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 2, 2025
Google will repair Hurricane Harvey victims' Pixel phones for free in Houston
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。