Pubdate: Thu, 22 Jan 2004 Source: Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO) Copyright: 2004, Denver Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.rockymountainnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371 Author: Becky Bohrer Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n024/a05.html?1383 DOGS MAY WEED OUT PROLIFIC PLANT Pooch Being Trained To Sniff For Knapweed BILLINGS, Mont. - Someday soon, man's best friend could also be one of his biggest allies in the war on noxious weeds. That's the hope of researchers such as Kim Goodwin, who are studying whether dogs can be trained to detect the prolific - and problematic - spotted knapweed the same way they can be trained to sniff out drugs and bombs. Goodwin, a weed prevention coordinator at Montana State University at Bozeman, said she got the idea for putting dogs to work by seeing how they have been used at airports, mail facilities and ports. "I thought maybe dogs could do the same thing across landscapes because we have a problem with invasive plants spreading," she said. "To be most effective with weeds spreading, we have to detect them early." That's been a problem because, while ranchers and land managers can fan out over a pasture to look for the weed, it is time-consuming and often not successful. Enter a dog named Knapweed Nightmare. Nightmare, as trainer Hal Steiner calls her, was being trained as a drug detection dog for law enforcement when Goodwin contacted Steiner with her idea. Steiner owns Rocky Mountain Command Dogs near Bozeman and has extensive experience training dogs for tasks ranging from medical service to drug detection. Steiner said he has been working with Nightmare, trying to get her more focused on the scent of the weed. Small knapweed samples are bundled in towels to create toys that Steiner often hides for Nightmare to find. Over time, hiding places will get more difficult. Trials are scheduled to begin this spring. Researchers say Knapweed Nightmare will be unleashed on 10-acre rangeland parcels that have spotted knapweed. This project is important, they say, because of what's at stake. Noxious weeds such as spotted knapweed can be costly to the agricultural and tourism communities. Dave Burch, state weed coordinator at Montana's Department of Agriculture, said spotted knapweed is estimated to cost the state's economy about $42 million a year and infests about 5 million acres in Montana, he said. While it's widespread, trying to hunt the weed for elimination is rather unscientific. Ranchers and land managers search the range, often on foot, for the pinkish-purple flowerhead. Herbicides can be used to control spotted knapweed, at a cost of up to $50 an acre, said Jerry Marks, extension agent at Missoula County. Sheep, goats and even insects can also be used for control, he said. "It has become probably one of the most discussed and cussed plants I can think of," Marks said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman