I want to claim a Tracker Dog!
Username: Catsplat18
Tracker ID: #049
Dog's name: Ebateli
Who/what do they protect?
Specially created and trained to focus its hostility only on human-made threats, Ebateli (meaning "protector" in Lingala) currently works in Odzala-Kokoua National Park in the Republic of Congo.
While the park has several livestock guardian dogs, they do little to deter poachers. They are prone to making mistakes and sometimes act aggressively to the gorillas they are meant to protect. Worse, the poachers have no qualms shooting them on sight, or sending their own dogs after them. After demands from the local and international community to better protect its wildlife, the Congolese government partnered with an NGO to test the application of Tracker Dogs in environments very different from what they are used to at the Facility. While Tracker Dogs have been used in wilderness environments countless times, this is the first one to be tasked with protecting an entire national park. Ebateli was chosen for their remarkable empathy and intuition. They are able to tell the difference between park rangers, friendly soldiers, scientists, researchers, and tourists from criminal poachers, loggers, miners, and other dangers. The park is a refuge to very endangered animals like western lowland gorillas, bongos, and forest elephants, and it is absolutely vital that a tracker dog would get along with them. Ebateli is up to the task. They are even seen as the alpha by the park’s resident LGDs, and leads the group just like their own handlers lead them. This was an unexpected but welcome surprise.
Their coloring helps them blend in with the underbrush, and their fur is thick and coarse only in the areas that need the most protection from thorns or insects. Their extraordinary hearing, sense of smell, and echolocation allow them to navigate the many different terrains and habitats that the park encompasses, and hone in on their task without being distracted. Their sense of smell also allows them to detect Ebola-stricken gorillas long before researchers would be able to (a 2005 outbreak decimated the park’s population by 70-95%, and it has slowly been recovering), allowing for faster medical care and isolation of infected individuals. Although one would assume their large size is a disadvantage for moving around in the jungle, even larger animals such as forest elephants create natural pathways for other creatures to use; Ebateli patrols these with vigor. Additionally, their size allows them to encourage other animals to move to different areas, a type of herding ability that was trained into them at the Tracker Dog Facility. Their prehensile tongue also allows them to manipulate their environment in a way most animals cannot (including picking up trash and freeing animals from hunters’ traps), and they are often seen tongue-in-trunk with baby elephants, mimicking their behavior to provide comfort, especially to the orphans. Do not be fooled by this kindness, however — when faced with a threat, Ebateli will stop at nothing to eliminate it. Their teeth, size, and raw power is a terrifying sight to behold, but if you’re the one witnessing it, you’ve certainly done something atrocious and you deserve what you get. (Ebateli will first attempt to subdue an offender and bring them over to the nearest park ranger [another example of the herding training put to good use], but in life-or-death situations [including the potential death of an endangered animal], the Tracker Dog will not hesitate to use lethal force, though always with a warning growl and spine rattle.)
The success of Ebateli has inspired other countries to purchase Tracker Dogs to patrol their most treasured wilderness preserves, especially in remote areas.