Call & Times

TSA opting for friendlier look with floppy-eared sniffer dogs

- By KARIN BRULLIARD

The dogs deployed by the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion at airports nationwide use their noses to sniff out explosives and contraband. But pooches selected for duty these days are picked not just for the ability of their snouts – the shape of their ears matters, too.

TSA officials say the agency is increasing­ly replacing retired pointy-eared dogs – think German shepherds - with floppy-eared sorts including Labrador retrievers. The recruits have a friendlier look, officials say.

“We find the passenger acceptance of floppy-ear dogs is just better. It presents just a little bit less of a concern,” TSA Administra­tor David Pekoske told the Washington Examiner during a recent tour at Washington Dulles Internatio­nal Airport. “Doesn’t scare children.”

About 1,200 TSA dogs from seven breeds are used to screen U.S. passengers and baggage, TSA spokesman James Gregory told The Washington Post. Five are breeds whose ears rest softly on their heads: Labs, golden retrievers, German shorthaire­d pointers, wire-haired pointers and Vizslas. Two have ears that shoot skyward: German shepherds and Belgian Malinoises.

But about four in five recent additions to the canine corps are of the droopy-eared persuasion, and the agency hopes to stick to that ratio, Gregory said. The considerat­ion of ear position, he added, was an informal internal decision “that is more about adapting to people’s perception­s about floppy-eared dogs (sporting breeds) being more friendly versus pointy-eared dogs (herding dog breeds) that may appear to be more aggressive-looking.”

Working-dog providers are also increasing­ly opting to breed retrievers and other sporting dogs, Gregory said.

This doggy developmen­t made a splash on social media, where some observers greeted it as a welcome gesture from an agency not often lauded for its considerat­ion of traveler sentiments. Others decried it as “canine racism,” not to mention a misplaced focus on dogs when barking TSA agents are a more common complaint, and offered up photos of perfectly nice-looking dogs with pointy ears.

Still others pointed out that these dogs, which typically wear “Do not pet” vests, are not supposed to be approachab­le.

“No petting, but there’s a balance,” Gregory

said. “We don’t want people to shy away because they’re scared.”

The agency’s understand­ing of passenger views on detection dog ears is anecdotal and not based on survey data, Gregory said. But some research backs up the idea that people view pointy ears as more intimidati­ng. In a 2016 study on perception­s of dogs with docked tails and cropped ears – or cut to stand up, as is typical on breeds such as the Doberman pinscher – University of British Columbia researcher­s found that participan­ts deemed altered dogs more aggressive and dominant than those with natural features.

Clive Wynne, a University of Arizona canine science scholar who has studied perception­s of dogs labeled “pit bulls,” praised the agency’s move. Detection dogs’ noses are “amazing technology,” he said, “but the fact that this technology is embodied in a living animal creates its own issues.”

“People have attitudes toward dogs - and different attitudes toward dogs that look different,” Wynne said in an email. “So if you want to

have a dog contact a vast number of people of many different background­s, you need that dog to be presentabl­e to the widest possible range of folks.”

Floppy ears have actually played a significan­t role in scientists’ understand­ing of animals’ friendline­ss toward humans. In an experiment that began in 1959 and continues today, scientists in Russia have sought to breed tame silver foxes. They selected the gentlest animals to start each new generation, and within 10 cycles, they had pups that were less aggressive and fearful. What’s more, these amiable foxes sported new physical characteri­stics, including curly tails, mottled fur – and yes, floppy ears. The same traits are seen in many domesticat­ed animals.

Why these physical traits often accompany tameness is not yet clear. But it means that humans have for thousands of years associated them with more docile animals. That said, German shepherds, Belgian Malinoises and other triangle-eared breeds are no less domesticat­ed or tame than others. All purebred dogs’ looks, including their ears, have been shaped by selective breeding, and erect ears do not necessaril­y signal an aggressive temperamen­t.

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