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| Training
Interactive Outreach Animals |
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Over
the past six years I have had the great fortune to participate in
the expansion of educational outreach and media opportunities utilizing
park animals for SeaWorld, Busch Gardens and Discovery Cove. Training
animals to interact safely with strangers, be comfortable in a transport
enclosure, react positively to being away from home, not be scared
by new sounds and sights, and perform trained
behavior when requested, is a gigantic, but necessary challenge.
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The
ability to begin with a young, naïve animal, may seem to be
the optimal situation with many species if you have the time. But
that is not to say older animals cannot adapt and find travel reinforcing.
There is an advantage to teaching an older, more experienced animal
to travel well - they already may know quite a bit of behavior,
be comfortable with lots of people, touching and activity, and in
general, be more calm. We found this to be the case with one of
our California sea
lions who appeared with me on The Tonight Show. He had not done
studio work prior to this. He did however have years and years of
show and in-park visit experience, in quite a variety of areas in
the park. One of the final tests to see if he was ready for the
show was when the trainers took the animal inside our 4-D theater
while the movie and effects were in progress. If cannons, air puffs,
and strobe type lighting didn't affect him, we knew he was ready
for just about anything! The trainers also worked him on transport
for several weeks before the appearance. After a three-hour transport,
and hours of waiting and rehearsal before filming, our "star" was
calm and confident on the stage of the Tonight Show.
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| Several
years ago we trained two one-year old naïve sea lions for the
same trip. For six months prior to the appearance, we worked on conditioning
them to be comfortable in the transport unit, a few basic behaviors,
and on being calm and relaxed in new environments. They did a great
job on stage with Jay and myself, but will definitely become more
comfortable with additional years of experience behind them as our
older sea lion had. |
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Obviously,
for these types of outreach, desensitization is the key. There are
several main areas on which we concentrate - handling the animal,
kenneling, visual stimuli and noise.
We
train animals to be comfortable being handled in unusual ways utilizing
approximations, expecting and reinforcing non-resistance, calmness,
and acceptance from the animal. I have found lots of short, positive
approximations in the beginning can actually eliminate the flight
or aggression response that might be encountered when circumstances
are uncomfortable. I have utilized play like hide and seek, tag
and "gotcha!" to "train" positive acceptance and desense of unpredictable
events. We approximate the acceptance of potentially negative stimuli,
paying close attention to and extending thresholds - and reinforce
acceptance and relaxation. If the animal is trained to accept being
picked up at any moment, by any person, being placed into a kennel,
handed to someone else, or to show off a part of their body, they're
fine with it. Training animals to be handled "unusually" at times
is a great tool to have that still allows your relationship to be
based on trust.
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| Desensitizing
visual and auditory stimuli is another important area. When in a new
environment, animals are particularly attuned to novel visual stimuli
and many objects and movements are threatening. Props, equipment,
children, cameras, etc. moving quickly towards them can be particularly
frightening. We have spent many sessions slamming doors, dropping
trash-can lids, blasting the stereo, flicking the lights, rotating
the disco ball, sliding chairs across the room, throwing balls, playing
the drums and dancing around the room in order to make these stimuli
less meaningful, and in fact, reinforcing. |
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I want
to share with the world the traits that make each animal unique
and fascinating - what great manipulators their hands are, how high
they can jump and what loud, interesting vocalizations they have.
Each appearance and event always reminds me of how much work it
takes to have a successful interactive outreach program, and how
much more we still would like to accomplish. But one thing we have
accomplished with trained animal interactions is the ability to
touch the hearts of people, who then seem to understand how rewarding
it is to share this world with other forms of life and take action
to preserve it.
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