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28.10.2010 15:41:42

By TARA PARKER-POPE, 25th Oct 2010

Like many pet owners, I have, on occasion, dressed up my dog. One Halloween, Fluffy was a pink princess. Another time, she was Batman.

But in the latest New Yorker, Alexandra Horowitz, a dog expert who teaches psychology, animal behavior and canid cognition at Barnard College in New York, says that while dressing up the dog for Halloween may delight the owner, the dog most likely is not amused.

To put raiments on a dog is to blithely ignore his essential dogness. Consider the Canis part of his heritage. Both wolves and dogs are descended from some wolflike ancestor; thus, we might look at the behavior of the dog’s cousin, the present-day wolf (Canis lupus), in order to provide one explanation for dog behavior. Among wolves, one animal may “stand over” another: literally placing his body on top of and touching the other, as a scolding or a mild putting-in-one’s-place. To a dog, a costume, fitting tight around the dog’s midriff and back, might well reproduce that ancestral feeling. So the principal experience of wearing a costume would not be the experience of festivity; rather, the costume produces the discomfiting feeling that someone higher ranking is nearby. This interpretation is borne out by many dogs’ behavior when getting dressed in a costume: they may freeze in place as if they are being “dominated” — and soon try to dislodge the garments by shaking, pawing or rolling in something so foul that it necessitates immediate disrobing.
Ms. Horowitz, author of “Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell and Know,”notes, though, that the experience of wearing a costume isn’t “entirely torturous” for your pet.

By submitting to be a jack-o-lantern, hot dog (with bun), biker dude or princess, the dog gains something valuable. He gets your attention, and probably an extra round of liver treats. Aside from the liver, there is little as nourishing to a dog as the attention of his owner.
To learn more, read the full article, “On Dressing Up Your Pets,” and then please join the discussion below. How does your pet react to being dressed up for Halloween?

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/28/do-dogs-like-to-dress-up-for-halloween/?apage=1 


  
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20.10.2009 15:58:39

October 20, 2009 05:21 PM ET

Kids aren’t the only critters getting sick with swine flu; a ferret has come down with it, too. The pet's owners took their ferret to a vet in Portland, Ore., on October 5, and the ferret’s nose mucus tested positive for genetic markers for H1N1 flu. Scientists have known for a long time that ferrets can get human flu; in fact, they use ferrets in the laboratory to test flu treatments. But ferrets are also popular pets. In this case, first reported in the Oregonian, it sounds like the ferret got the flu from its owner. And it appears to be the first reported case of H1N1 flu traveling from people to animals.


  
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16.10.2009 18:18:38

Japan's pets are the most spoilt in the world. They wear clothes, eat in restaurants, bathe in spas. But what happens to the two percent that find themselves homeless? Re-homing is unheard of in Japan, where only the latest creation (often inbred) will do. The answer, revealed in this video, is to gas them, en masse.

According to Japanese director Motoharu Iida, who's visited several "animal facilities" in researching his documentary Dogs, Cats and Humans, between 310,000 and 350,000 abandoned pets "disappear" in these chambers every year - that's almost 1,000 per day (other reports coming out of Japan have quoted up to 1,200 per day).

The use of gas chambers for unwanted pets is not limited to Japan. Although in Europe gassing is considered inhumane and the standard method of dog destruction is lethal injection, in the United States for example, carbon monoxide poisoning is still one of the methods practiced.  

According to a 2008 report by the intergovernmental Terrestrial Animal Health Standards Commission, the use of gas is not recommended but "acceptable". Cited concerns include distress (convulsions, vocalization and agitation), anxiety, and severe pain. Other methods, comprising lethal injection, electrocution and shooting, are preferred.

http://observers.france24.com/en/content/20091015-pet-dogs-japan-love-them-leave-them-gas-chamber 


  
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09.10.2009 03:08:09

my paper, Oct 05, 2009, Sia Ling Xin

It aims to reduce animal abandonment and to help abandoned animals find new homes.

TWENTY people each walked away with a $100 pet-shop voucher yesterday, simply for having adopted an abandoned animal and taken good care of it.

After having been monitored for half a year, they became the first batch of recipients in a new scheme called the Pet Adoption Bonus Scheme Award.

This initiative was started by Pet Lovers Foundation, a new non-profit organisation for pets, which aims to reduce animal abandonment and to help abandoned animals find new homes.

The foundation was set up by pet-food and accessory retail chain Pet Lovers Centre, and was launched on World Animal Day yesterday.

The organisation's spokesman said that pet abuse and abandonment are still rampant.

Since it was started in 1973, Pet Lovers Centre has donated to charities and the creation of the foundation furthers its efforts to aid the animal community, said the spokesman.

The foundation is working with Action for Singapore Dogs, which runs a dog shelter, to train abandoned dogs to become search-and-rescue dogs or guide dogs for the blind, or those with other disabilities or mental conditions.

Professional trainers have already identified the first batch of five dogs.

Training will be completed in about six months' time.

At yesterday's event, pet owners and members of the public were invited to pledge against impulse buys and pet abandonment in favour of adoption.

Cat artist Paul Koh held a charity sale of T-shirts, printed with his paintings, there.

 


  
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09.10.2009 03:03:40

Straits Times, 5 Oct 2009, PADANG (WEST SUMATRA) - FOUR Singapore search and rescue dogs were put to work in the quake-hit city of Padang on Sunday, sniffing for signs of life under the rubble of a collapsed library and hotel.

The canines came with the 42-member Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) contingent that arrived in Padang to help in the international rescue effort following last Wednesday's 7.6 magnitude quake in the West Sumatra province.

According to the National Disaster Management Agency, 83,712 houses, 200 public buildings and 285 schools were destroyed. Another 100,000 buildings and 31 km of road were badly damaged, and five bridges collapsed across the disaster zone.

The SCDF team arrived in Padang on Friday evening and spent Saturday conducting an assessment of the sites in the city where search and rescue work was needed.

Yesterday, SCDF search and rescue dogs - Rocky, Bailey and Tommy - were sent in to comb the rubble of the city's four-storey library that had collapsed, trapping at least three people.

Only the library's distinctive uptilted roofs, in the shape of bull horns, remained intact.


  
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13.08.2009 03:18:14

AsiaOne, 12th Aug 2009

First case of ICA using sniffer dog used to detect contraband cigarettes.

During a joint operation conducted by the Immigration & Checkpoints Authority (ICA) and the Police K-9 Unit, a police dog named "Car" foiled a smuggler's attempt to conceal duty-unpaid cigarettes in car door panels.

This is the first case that a sniff dog had detected illegal cigarettes at the checkpoints.

On August 4 at the Woodlands Checkpoint, officers stopped a Singapore-registered vehicle for checks. Noticing that the driver appeared nervous, the officer proceeded to conduct a dog search on the vehicle.

During the search, "Car" pointed out a few areas of the vehicle such as the car door panels, back seat and the spare tyre compartment. True enough, a total of 1,305 packets of illegal cigarettes were found in the areas which the police dog had shown positive indication during sniffing.

The Singaporean driver was arrested. The vehicle and contraband cigarettes were also seized. Investigations revealed that the man had been hired by syndicates to smuggle duty-unpaid cigarettes using vehicles.

The man would be paid $500 if the cigarettes were successfully smuggled.

For his involvement with dealing and conveying duty-unpaid goods, which were offences under the Customs and GST Acts, the Singaporean man was sentenced by the court on 5 August to six months' jail.

Singapore Customs warns that buying, selling, conveying, delivering, storing, keeping, having in possession or dealing with contraband cigarettes are serious offences under the Customs and GST Acts. Stiff penalties are imposed for such offences. On conviction, offenders can be jailed as well as fined.

The vehicles used in the commission of such offences are also liable to be forfeited. The public are strongly advised not to buy duty-unpaid cigarettes. For possessing a packet of duty-unpaid cigarettes, an offender may face a minimum fine of $500 or prosecution in court.

As Singapore's first line of defence against terrorist threats, ICA has a duty to ensure the security and safety of Singapore. ICA has tightened security checks on passengers and vehicles at the checkpoints to prevent attempts to smuggle in undesirable persons, drugs, weapons, explosives and other contraband. The same methods of concealment used by contraband smugglers may be used by terrorists to smuggle arms and explosives to carry out attacks in Singapore. ICA would like to advise the public against smuggling unlawful goods into Singapore.

Members of the public with information on smuggling activities or evasion of duty or GST should contact the Singapore Customs Hotline at 1800-2330000 or email to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .


  
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10.08.2009 22:58:27

telegraph.co.uk, 9th Aug 2009

An owner has told how his pet cat was "crushed, asphyxiated and consumed whole" by a 13ft python belonging to a neighbour.

Wilbur, a four-year-old tabby, was devoured after straying into a nearby garden in Brislington, Bristol, where the Burmese python was lurking.

The cat's owners, Martin and Helen Wadey, heard "blood-chilling cries" and rushed to the neighbouring property to help. But after getting no reply from the house they were powerless to save Wilbur.

An RSPCA inspector later issued the snake's owner, Darren Bishop, with a verbal warning about appropriate housing and care requirements.

Now Mr and Mrs Wade are calling for a change in the law so that pythons are officially classed as dangerous animals, requiring a licence.

Mr Wade, 44, writing on his website "Justice for Wilbur", describes the cat as "beautiful, strong, soft, with a purr like a dynamo".

"We don't know whether Wilbur stumbled across the snake and it was an opportunistic kill, or if the snake was actively hunting him, but either way, we heard the python's strike from the terrified scream that came from Wilbur and the subsequent blood-chilling cries as he fought for his life," he said.

"Then in less than a minute, all was silent. He never stood a chance against a creature over 13 times his weight with such immense power. Wilbur was crushed, asphyxiated and consumed whole.

"Helen and I were both standing on our deck hearing everything, but unable to see what had happened, other than it involved Wilbur and it was something awful. From an upstairs window, I was able to make out movement in the garden in question, but no detail."

Pythons, which usually feed on birds and small mammals, wrap themselves around their victims. They can be bought as domestic pets for around ÂŁ100. Last month a two-year-old girl was reportedly crushed to death by an 8ft Burmese python.

Mr and Mrs Wadey, who have three other cats and no children, want to introduce a "Wilbur's amendment" to the Dangerous and Wild Animals Act and are petitioning No. 10 Downing Street.

The RSPCA said that all the evidence suggested that Wilbur had indeed been swallowed by the snake.

A spokeswoman said: "The cat was swallowed on June 25. The RSPCA attended the following day. The snake was scanned and we can confirm that a microchip was found inside.

"The owner was issued with a written warning about appropriate housing and care equipment. We can't know for certain that it was Wilbur, but it is very, very likely."

Mr Bishop has so far been unavailable for comment.


  
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02.05.2009 06:41:05

Larry Berreth, Eximiner.com, 1 May 2009

The media has been overrun with stories about Swine Flu (or its new PC moniker “H1N1”) but what about Dog Flu?

Canine influenza is when the flu occurs in dogs. It can be caused by different types of the influenza A virus, including equine influenza virus H3N8. The relationship with a mutated strain of H3N8 has been dated to 2004. Due to a lack of previous long term exposure to this virus, dogs have no natural immunity to it.

Dog flu can be spread rapidly between individual dogs. It is can have a high incidence, especially in certain regions of the U.S., but fortunately, a low level of mortality.

There is no certain evidence that the dog flu virus can be transferred to people, horses, cats, or other species.  H5N1, the infamous avain influenza or bird flu, was linked to the death of a dog in Thailand after it ate an infected duck.

At this time, there is no incidence of the current “swine flu”, influenza A strain H1N1, infecting any dogs.

The symptoms of dog flu may be similar to a respiratory infection, including a lasting cough and possible greenish nasal discharge. Severe cases may include a high fever or pneumonia brought on by secondary bacterial infections.

While the normal mortality due to dog flu itself is only around 1% in the general and shelter populations, fatalities due to secondary pneumonia can be as high as 50%, if proper treatment is not given.

If pneumonia or any respiratory conditions develop, it is best to seek medical attention immediately so that they do not progress.

Direct treatment for dog flu is given as supportive care and antibiotics for secondary bacterial infections. Currently, there is no canine equivalent of the human flu shot.

The canine influenza virus can easily be rendered moot by thoroughly cleaning your dog’s environment with common disinfectants such as bleach solutions and limiting exposure to other contaminated animals. 

 


  
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26.04.2009 17:35:09

Liew Hanqing, New Paper, 24 April 2009

IT WAS a brief advertisement to sell a dog on a local classifieds website.

But the ad, posted by a 15-year-old student, caused a stir online after pictures of the dog were leaked.

In pictures posted on the forums, the dog is shown locked in a small cage. Its fur looks dirty and matted.
The write-up on the advertisement describes the dog as 'a one-year-old female' which 'does not bark much'.


  
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19.04.2009 00:08:18

Diane C. Lade, Sun Sentinel, 17 April 2009

A 5.5-ounce can of "holistic pheasant" cat food sells for $1.73 at a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., specialty pet food store. Three blocks away, you can get the same sized can of a supermarket chain brand cat food for 39 cents. Is the more expensive one better for your cat than the supermarket food?

Not necessarily, at least according to eight dog and cat nutrition experts at seven well-known veterinary medical schools who were interviewed by Consumer Reports.


  
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