Dogs


Repetitive behaviour, such as tail-chasing, is more common in dogs who have first-time owners, a new study suggests.

The traits are also more likely to be seen in animals who live with larger families and those who exercise for less than an hour a day.

Previous research has found that abnormal repetitive behaviour can damage relationships between dogs and owners and negatively impact the animal’s wellbeing.

These actions could include snapping at their reflection or shadow, biting themselves, licking surfaces, pacing, staring, or spending time near their water bowl.

The authors suggest repetitive behaviour in dogs is linked to a range of factors, and understanding these factors could help improve dog welfare.

Writing in the Scientific Reports journal, the researchers said: "As abnormal repetitive behaviour can considerably worsen the wellbeing of dogs and impair the dog-owner relationship, a better understanding of the environmental, lifestyle, and molecular factors affecting canine repetitive behaviour can benefit both dogs and humans."

Hannes Lohi, from the University of Helsinki, Finland, and colleagues surveyed Finnish owners of 4,436 dogs from 22 breeds between February 2015 and September 2018.

The owners described how often their pets engaged in a range in a variety of repetitive behaviours.

Researchers found that 1,315 (30%) of the dogs engaged in repetitive behaviour and the rate of this was associated with a dog’s home environment and lifestyle.

Repetitive behaviour was 58% more likely among dogs that were their owner’s first dog, and animals that lived with one person were 33% less likely to engage in repetitive behaviour than those that lived with a family of three or more people.

The study also found that dogs who did not live with another dog were 64% more likely to engage in repetitive behaviour than those that did.

While exercising for less than one hour per day was associated with a 53% increased likelihood of the actions, compared to exercising for between one and two hours per day.

Repetitive behaviour was most common in German shepherds, Chinese crested dogs and Pembroke Welsh corgis and least common in smooth collies, miniature schnauzers and lagotto romagnolos, according to the study.

Age also appeared to play a role, with the behaviour more likely to be displayed by dogs under the age of two, and over the age of eight.
 

Joe Pinkstone
Sat, 16 September 2023 at 10:44 am GMT+1



Guide dogs Spencer and Albus have been in strict isolation for months since they were found to be infected with the incurable Brucella disease
The Guide Dogs headquarters has been rocked after two young dogs were put in quarantine after testing positive for an incurable disease that can be transmitted to humans, The Telegraph can reveal.
The young males were screened for the bacterium Brucella canis earlier this year and returned a positive test. The animals have been separated from the other dogs and are handled only by vets in hazmat suits, despite concerns the tests were false positives.
 
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Joe Pinkstone
Sat, 16 September 2023 at 10:44 am GMT+1



Guide dogs Spencer and Albus have been in strict isolation for months since they were found to be infected with the incurable Brucella disease
The Guide Dogs headquarters has been rocked after two young dogs were put in quarantine after testing positive for an incurable disease that can be transmitted to humans, The Telegraph can reveal.
The young males were screened for the bacterium Brucella canis earlier this year and returned a positive test. The animals have been separated from the other dogs and are handled only by vets in hazmat suits, despite concerns the tests were false positives.
i can't get it to show the text without it adding all the pictures and adverts, but it seems that they've got these 2 dogs who have tested positive for an incurable disease which can transmit to humans, the test is 'only' 98% reliable, the staff have been wearing hazmat suits while dealing with the dogs, but the charity want to rehome them somewhere remote.
Doesn't make sense. If the only guaranteed way to stop it is euthanasia, then surely that's what they should do. The dogs were for stud, but now they'll be neutered. Immunocompromised people are particularly at risk. They can't go as working guide dogs. Even if it's a false positive, is it worth the risk of infecting other dogs and potentially people, just because they're pretty dogs? What about the cost to the nhs if the disease does get passed on, and what about the possibility of antibiotic resistance? Surely a vet, particularly a senior vet, especially one with oversight of such a large organisation, should err on the side of caution and just put the animals to sleep.
 

Joe Pinkstone
Sat, 16 September 2023 at 10:44 am GMT+1



Guide dogs Spencer and Albus have been in strict isolation for months since they were found to be infected with the incurable Brucella disease
The Guide Dogs headquarters has been rocked after two young dogs were put in quarantine after testing positive for an incurable disease that can be transmitted to humans, The Telegraph can reveal.
The young males were screened for the bacterium Brucella canis earlier this year and returned a positive test. The animals have been separated from the other dogs and are handled only by vets in hazmat suits, despite concerns the tests were false positives.
A relative to the bacteria that causes brucellosis in cattle. https://www.cdc.gov/brucellosis/veterinarians/host-animals.html
It's a notifiable disease.
 
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Is it normal for a GSD to have skin like a rhino? She's been on a high dose of prednisolone tablets for about 4 weeks but wouldn't eat on Saturday morning, so the vet has given me injections for her instead, but so far, despite me thinking I was getting it into her, the two doses have mostly ended up running down the outside and onto the floor, or my foot. Her skin seems tight as well as thick. I've not come across that before in a dog. Is it a side effect of the pred?
 

A bit of that made me think of Billy Connolly!
my dog certainly talks to me ,mostly to say hurry up lets go
 
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