The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

For environmen­tal dogs, sniffing out doody is their duty

Specially trained team finds broken sewer pipes, more.

- By Wayne Parry

FAIR HAVEN, N.J. — Some pollution-sniffing dogs at the Jersey shore have shown they’re No. 1 at sniffing out No. 2.

A team of specially trained dogs has pointed out more than 70 spots in three towns near the Navesink River where human waste may be making its way into the waterway, parts of which are closed to shellfishi­ng because of high bacteria levels.

They sniffed out potentiall­y broken or leaking sewer pipes, failed septic systems, and places where waste might be mishandled or improperly disposed, according to a report released by the Clean Ocean Action environmen­tal group.

Fair Haven Mayor Ben Lucarelli said the dogs were invaluable in laying out in just a few days’ time a map for the town to make repairs.

“At first the scientists and the PhDs we brought down to look at the problem kind of looked at the dogs and said, ‘What can they do?’” he said. “It turns out the dogs were excellent. What started out as ‘Are you kidding?’ evolved into ‘Wow, this is awesome!’”

Lucarelli said his town has $250,000 set aside in its capital budget that it can draw on to do the repairs, which will include snaking cameras along sewer pipes to pinpoint where a fix may be needed.

The issue is taking on urgency in and near the Navesink, which remains a popular spot for crabbing, boating and sailing. Multimilli­on-dollar mansions line the river’s Middletown shoreline, including one belonging to rock star and philanthro­pist Jon Bon Jovi.

Environmen­tal groups including Clean Ocean Action brought the dogs from Otisfield, Maine-based Environmen­tal Canine Services to Fair Haven, Red Bank and Middletown, N.J., in September. The company’s dogs have helped find sources of pollution in Bayview State Park in Washington state; along Lake Michigan; and in Bridgman, Mich., among other spots.

Environmen­tal and government officials in those places gave the dogs high marks in quickly and efficientl­y sniffing out sources of pollution that humans were then able to fix.

Scott Reynolds, who runs Environmen­tal Canine Services with his, wife Karen, said the dogs were needed to help reverse pollution into the Navesink, where water quality “is significan­tly deteriorat­ing day by day.”

The dogs are rescued from shelters and specially trained to detect human waste in the same way that other dogs are trained to sniff out drugs or explosives. They give an alert either by barking or sitting down when they detect something. As important as what they find is what they don’t find: places where the dogs don’t alert are generally considered to be safe.

Comparison­s with laboratory tests — which are more expensive and take longer to get results — show the dogs are highly accurate and will not react to the presence of animal waste.

“Now these places can really go to town and investigat­e those areas,” said Cindy Zipf, executive director of New Jersey’s Clean Ocean Action group. “Once you find it, you can fix it.”

In addition to potentiall­y broken or leaky pipes, the dogs scouted out pollution from unlikely sources, including trash bins outside a nursing home where human waste may have been dumped.

Problems were found on public and private property, as well as at several commercial establishm­ents.

“This showed us where we need to pay attention,” Lucarelli said. “It proved incredibly effective.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States