Amor Michael D, Barmos Shari, Cameron Hayley, Hartnett Chris, Hodgens Naomi, Jamieson La Toya, May Tom W, McMullan-Fisher Sapphire, Robinson Alastair, Rutter Nicholas J
Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia.
Department of Aquatic Zoology, Western Australian Museum, Welshpool, WA 6106, Australia.
iScience. 2024 Apr 29;27(5):109729. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.109729. eCollection 2024 May 17.
Plant and animal conservation have benefited from the assistance of wildlife detection dogs (WDDs) since 1890, but their application to fungal conservation has not been trialed. In a world-first, we tested the effectiveness of WDDs and human surveyors when searching for experimentally outplanted fungi in natural habitat. We focused on a critically endangered fungus from Australia, and showed that a WDD outperformed a human surveyor: our WDD detected a greater proportion of targets, had a faster time to first discovery, and had fewer false negatives. Our study highlights the tremendous potential for WDDs to enhance fungal conservation by demonstrating their utility in one of the most challenging fungal systems: a rare species with low population densities and low volatility. Our findings suggest that the application of WDDs to fungal conservation should enhance continuing efforts to document and conserve an understudied kingdom that is threatened by habitat loss and climate change.
自1890年以来,动植物保护受益于野生动物探测犬(WDDs)的协助,但它们在真菌保护中的应用尚未得到试验。在一项世界首创的研究中,我们测试了野生动物探测犬和人类调查员在自然栖息地中寻找实验性移栽真菌时的有效性。我们聚焦于一种来自澳大利亚的极度濒危真菌,结果表明野生动物探测犬的表现优于人类调查员:我们的野生动物探测犬检测到的目标比例更高,首次发现目标的时间更快,且假阴性更少。我们的研究通过展示野生动物探测犬在最具挑战性的真菌系统之一中的效用,突出了其在加强真菌保护方面的巨大潜力:这是一种种群密度低且挥发性低的稀有物种。我们的研究结果表明,将野生动物探测犬应用于真菌保护应加强持续努力,以记录和保护这个受到栖息地丧失和气候变化威胁且研究不足的生物界。