Image of the Day: Dog Detectives

Trained canines are remarkably accurate at detecting a pathogen that has devastated citrus crops.

Written byAmy Schleunes
| 1 min read

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ABOVE: Szaboles, a dog trained to survey orchards and detect Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus, the bacterial pathogen that causes citrus huanglongbing
TIM R. GOTTWALD

Researchers trained 10 dog detectives to identify citrus huanglongbing, a pathogen that is spread by the Asian citrus psyllid and has devastated orchard production in Florida. The expert sniffers, including Boby, Szaboles, and Bello, could spot Valencia orange trees infected by psyllids roughly 99 percent of the time, according to a study published on February 3 in PNAS. While human inspection of the plants is slow and inaccurate, dogs are able to identify bacteria weeks or years before we can and even outperformed PCR analyses in the study.

“The earlier you detect a disease, the better chance you have at stopping an epidemic,” coauthor and plant pathologist Timothy Gottwald of the US Department of Agriculture tells the Associated Press. “You’ve seen dogs working in airports, detecting drugs and ...

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Meet the Author

  • A former intern at The Scientist, Amy studied neurobiology at Cornell University and later earned her MFA in creative writing from the University of Iowa. She is a Los Angeles–based writer, editor, and communications strategist who collaborates on nonfiction books for Harper Collins and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and also teaches writing at Johns Hopkins University CTY. Her favorite projects involve sharing the insights of science and medicine.

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