Last year, a little pest known as a peppers weevil destroyed bell peppers crops all over Leamington, Ont., baffling harassment control managers and farmers alike.
This year, a staff during NatureFresh Farms motionless to do something odd to quarrel a problem — they got a dog.Â
“Chili is a newest member of a scouting team…Â she’s a purebred operative dog lerned to find peppers weevil,” pronounced Cam Lyons, an integrated harassment government director during NatureFresh. “As distant as we know, she’s a usually one in a universe looking for this harassment in a greenhouse.”
Chili is a noisy two-year-old Belgian Shepherd who was bred in Mexico. She’s been on a pursuit during a hothouse given July, and her usually goal is to find a little pests that can hurt an whole crop.Â

Chili, a two-year-old Belgium Shepard dog from Mexico, has a nose that can find a little peppers weevil harassment that can hurt whole crops. (Melissa Nakhavoly/CBC)
“It’s a really severe pest… we didn’t have a lot of options,” pronounced Lyons, who explained a harassment is intensely formidable to exterminate regulating normal methods. He pronounced a womanlike insect lays eggs on tip of a peppers that afterwards induce and feed on a fruit, eventually murdering it.Â
That’s where Chili comes in.Â
“We start on a outward of a hothouse actually, I’ll take her and we’ll hunt a fringe of a greenhouses,” pronounced Tina Heide, a biological director during NatureFresh and Chili’s handler. “I’ll have her spot out walls, spot a floors, we do skids like make-up crates, boxes anything we come across.”
Heide said that Chili takes a lot of breaks during her time acid for pests, so that she doesn’t get sleepy or overheat.
So distant this year, NatureFresh hasn’t had any peppers weevils in their crops so Heide hides vials of a pests around to keep Chili’s nose in a game.Â
“We don’t know when these things are going to come, where they’ll hit,” she said. “That’s because we work [Chili] with a vials so that in her mind she keeps anticipating them and it keeps [the scent] uninformed in her mind.”
Heide said that for Chili, it’s a daily game of hide-and-seek.Â
“I consider a scent-detection dog would be profitable on each farm,” pronounced Lyons. “We’re really vehement to have her around.”
Article source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/insect-sniffing-dog-keeps-greenhouse-pestfree-1.4368366?cmp=rss