The use of
dogs in
search and rescue (SAR) is a valuable component in responding to requests for lost and missing persons. Dedicated handlers and hard working, well-trained dogs are required in search efforts to be effective in their task.
Search and rescue (SAR) dogs detect human scent. Although exactly what this means to the dog is not known, it may include skin rafts, evaporated perspiration, respiratory gases, or decomposition gases released by bacterial action on human skin or tissues.
TypesSearch and rescue dogs can be generally classified as
airscenting,
tracking, or
trailing. Airscenting dogs primarily use airborne human scent to home in on subjects, whereas
tracking and trailing dogs rely on scent deposited on the ground by the subject. Airscenting dogs typically work off-lead, are non-scent discriminating (eg, locate scent from any human as opposed to a specific person), and cover large areas of terrain. Although other breeds can be trained for airscenting, the prototypical airscenting dog is a
herding (eg, German or Belgian shepherds, Border Collies) or sporting (eg, Golden or Labrador retrievers) breed that has a reputation for working closely and in coordination with a human handler.
Tracking and trailing dogs are usually scent discriminating and require an uncontaminated scent article from the subject and a relatively undisturbed search area, work on-lead to follow the subject's path, and may use non-human scent (eg, crushed vegetation, disturbed earth) in following the subject's movements. The bloodhound is the prototypical
tracking dog, although
herding and sporting breeds are often successfully trained for either
tracking or trailing.
Specific applications for SAR dogs include wilderness, disaster, cadaver, avalanche, and drowning or recovery.
In wilderness SAR applications,
airscenting dogs can be deployed to high-probability areas (places where the subject may be or where the subject's scent may collect, such as in drainages in the early morning) whereas
tracking/trailing dogs can be deployed from the subject's last known point (LKP) or the site of a discovered clue. Handlers must be capable of bush navigation, wilderness survival techniques, and be self-sufficient. The dogs must be capable of working for 4-8 hours without distraction (eg, by wildlife).
Disaster dogs are used to locate victims of catastrophic or mass-casualty events (eg, earthquakes, landslides, building collapses, aviation incidents). Many disaster dogs in the US are trained to meet the Federal Emergency Management Agency K9 standards for domestic or international deployment; advanced
agility and off-lead
training are prerequisites reflecting the nature of these dogs' application. Disaster dogs probably rely primarily on airscent, and may be limited in mass-casualty events by their inability to differentiate between survivors and recently-deceased victims.
Human Remains Detection (HRD) or
cadaver dogs are used to locate the remains of deceased victims. Depending on the nature of the search, these dogs may work off-lead (eg, to search a large area for buried remains) or on-lead (to recover clues from a crime scene). Airscenting and
tracking/trailing dogs are often cross-trained as cadaver dogs, although the scent the dog detects is clearly of a different nature than that detected for live or recently-deceased subjects. Cadaver dogs can locate entire bodies (including those buried or submerged), decomposed bodies, body fragments (including blood, tissues, hair, and bones), or skeletal remains; the capability of the dog is dependent upon its
training.
Avalanche dogs work similarly to airscenting, disaster, or cadaver dogs, and must be able to rapidly tranistion from a wilderness SAR-airscenting scenario to a disaster scenario focused on pinpointing the subject's location.