Times of Suriname

US funding training of giant rats

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USA - The US government will fund the training of a team of giant rats to combat illegal wildlife traffickin­g in Africa.

An elite group of African giant pouched rats will be used at ports, initially in Tanzania, to detect illegal shipments of pangolins – the world’s most trafficked animal, which has been pushed towards extinction due to the trade in its scales and skins – as well as hardwood timber.

The US Fish & Wildlife Service is spending $100,000 on a pilot project that will train rats to detect the illegal items and learn to communicat­e this to their human handlers. The rats, which can grow up to 3ft long, have poor eyesight but an excellent sense of smell. They have pouched cheeks, much like a hamster, which give the species its name. African giant pouched rats have previously been attached to leashes and used to detect mines and tuberculos­is. Bart Weetjens, a Belgian rat enthusiast, started a project that has trained and accredited rats that have found 1,500 buried landmines in Africa and south-east Asia. More than 5,000 TB patients have also been identified by the rats. The Fish & Wildlife Service said it hoped that the foray into the investigat­ion of wildlife smuggling would be the first stage of a “much larger project to mainstream rats as an innovative tool in combating illegal wildlife trade”. The Obama administra­tion has recently escalated its crackdown on the hunting and traffickin­g of imperiled African wildlife. Last week, the Fish & Wildlife Service announced a ban on the import of all “trophies” – such as heads, paws and tails – taken by American hunters from captive-bred lions in Africa. The money for rat training is part of a larger $1.2m package that will provide funding for law enforcemen­t in Cambodia, forest patrols to reduce tiger poaching in Indonesia and sniffer dogs to unearth illegal shipments of saiga antelope horn. “These grants provide much-needed resources to support projects on the ground where wildlife traffickin­g is decimating some of the Earth’s most cherished and most unusual species,” said Dan Ashe, director of the Fish & Wildlife Service. (theguardia­n)

 ??  ?? A man holds an African giant pouched rat. (Photo: cna)
A man holds an African giant pouched rat. (Photo: cna)

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