A canine conservationist called Freya is helping scientists to locate endangered great crested newts

By Stuart Blackman

Published: Friday, 07 July 2023 at 12:00 am


Sniffer dogs can detect drugs, explosives, escaped prisoners and, it turns out, great crested newts.

New research published in PLOS ONE shows that a springer spaniel named Freya is able to detect the amphibians buried in the soil with nearly 90 per cent accuracy.

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Great crested newt (Triturus cristatus) on moss in spring. Females lack the crest of the males. © Sandra Sandbridge/Getty

Freya’s owner and collaborator is Nikki Glover, an ecologist at the University of Salford, who came up with the idea in 2014 while working on a reptile relocation project at a housing development.

“There was time pressure to find all these reptiles,” she says. “Then I came across an article about using dogs to find bat carcasses under wind turbines, so I got a puppy and went from there. Freya turned out to be amazing.”

Glover is hopeful that the technique will shed new light on the biology of great crested newts.

“We know a lot about them aquatically, but we don’t have much of a clue about what they do terrestrially,” she says. “This is a lovely non-invasive way to study that.”

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