One of Colombia’s most powerful drug cartels has put a bounty on the head of an enemy who has cost them over $100 million — a drug-sniffing police pooch who has swept 10 tons of cocaine off the streets.

The Urabeños — aka the Gulf Clan — is desperate to stop the crime-fighting German shepherd named Sombra from wrecking its lucrative business and has offered as much as $70,000 to have her captured or killed, according to the Telegraph.

Sombra, whose name means Shadow, sniffed out roughly 10 tons of Urabeños cocaine this year, prompting the murderous gang to put out the hit on her.

“The fact they want to hurt Sombra and offer such a high reward for her capture or death shows the impact she’s had on their profits,” a police spokesperson told the Telegraph.

The 6-year-old canine worked out of Turbo in the country’s Urabá region — the Urabeños heartland and a key area for drug traffickers because of the access to the sea — and is responsible for 245 arrests over the past few years.

She’s since been reassigned to El Dorado International Airport in Bogota, where it’s considered safer because it’s out of the gang’s territory, with beefed-up security personnel.

Sombra began working with the Colombian police as a puppy and earned her stripes scouring ports along the Atlantic coast, according to BBC News.

In 2016, she made her first big bust, rooting out nearly 3,000 kilograms (3.3 tons) of cocaine hydrochloride hidden in banana boxes in a shipment that was destined for Belgium, the Washington Post reported, citing an RCN Radio report.

The following year, she sniffed out 1.1 tons of cocaine in another load headed for Belgium, and found 5.3 tons of blow last June in Turbo. She also unearthed another 4 tons secreted in exported car parts.

The yellow vest-wearing pooch has twice been awarded the Wilson Quintero medal — which recognizes those combating the deadly drug trade — and has risen to celebrity status with stints on TV and frequent mentions on Bogota’s narcotics police Twitter account.

Colombia is one of the top producers of cocaine in the world. Ninety-two percent of cocaine seized in the US in 2016 originated in the South American country, according to the US Drug Enforcement Agency.

Dairo Antonio Úsuga, the boss of the Urabeños, is one of Colombia’s most wanted men.