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Meet Poppy, a dog trained in oil spill response helping TAMU-CC with field survey

TAMU-CC is working on releasing an app, so the public can report tar they find while out on the coastline.

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — A man's best friend is making a huge effort to help keep our Coastal Bend beaches clean.

Poppy the English Springer Spaniel is trained in oil spill response, her job is to detect tar clumps buried under sand and seaweed.

Tar is not new to our area, it can occur naturally and effect our environment. 

Dr. Loretta Battaglia from the Island University's Center for Coastal Studies said it is working on an app to be released that allows the public to report tar they see while out on the coastline. 

"Ultimately what we'd like to do is turn over this app that we're building to the public so that we can enlist them to help us in some citizen science end when they're out on the beach they can report tar balls and then it goes into a data base and hopefully we can go and take care of those tar balls," Battaglia said.

Principal and founder of Chiron K9 Paul Bunker described how people might spot tar when at the beach.

"So if people been on the beach and they notice little black spots on the bottom of their feet or on their towels, it's basically washed up old oil and that's what we've come to clean up,"

He also mentioned that in the course of two years, thousands of tar balls have been detected.

Poppy was able to find 30 washed up tar balls along Mustang Island today helping to keep our beaches clean!

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