Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Pooches eat doggy poop, but researcher­s say it’s nothing to bark about

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DOES your pooch eat poo? If it’s any consolatio­n, he’s in extremely good company.

In a new paper, veterinary researcher­s at the University of California at Davis who surveyed thousands of dog owners found 16% of pups consume other canines’ faeces “frequently,” having been spotted doing it more than six times by their owners. The vast majority prefer their poop to be fresh, or no more than one to two days since deposit.

But why? Google this topic and you’ll be greeted with pages upon pages of articles offering confident explanatio­ns about stress or enzyme deficienci­es. But when Benjamin Hart, a veterinari­an who directs the Centre for Animal Behaviour at Davis, took a look at the scientific literature on poop-eating, or coprophagy, he found few answers. “For every person you ask about this, you get a different opinion. Because they’re guessing, whether they’re veterinari­ans or experts in behaviour,” said Hart, the lead author on the paper, which was published in the journal Veterinary Medicine and Science. “You don’t want to say to a client, ‘I don’t know why they do it’.”

Those experts get asked about it a lot because for many dog owners, this is a foul and intractabl­e problem. While gulping down turds at the dog park is typically not dangerous to the pooch, Hart said the mere idea – not to mention the resulting potty breath – is so revolting to some owners that they’re willing to give their poop-eaters away.

“People can be quite tolerant of even aggressive dogs,” he said. “But put this one out there, and they’re really intolerant.”

Hart and his co-authors hoped their two surveys, which were completed by nearly 3 000 dog owners, might yield some useful data on the problem.

The researcher­s found no evidence tying coprophagy to age, dietary difference­s or compulsive behaviours such as tail-chasing. Frequent stool-eaters were also just as easily house-trained as other dogs, which ruled out the idea that they were simply more comfortabl­e with poop than peers with more refined tastes.

But more than 80% of the coprophagi­c dogs were reported to favour faeces no more than two days old.

Hart believes this taste for freshness suggests a cause that goes back more than 15 000 years – to dogs’ wolf ancestors.

Wolves typically defecate away from their dens, in part because faeces contain intestinal parasite eggs. But if, say, a sick or lame wolf did its business at home, the waste wouldn’t necessaril­y be dangerous immediatel­y. Parasite eggs usually don’t hatch into infectious larvae for a few days, Hart said.

“So how do you get rid of it? They don’t have pooperscoo­pers,” Hart said of wolves. “If they eat it right away, it’s safe to eat. They won’t get infected by parasites.”

That led Hart to proffer a new theory: That today’s poopeating dogs still carry around this wolfy instinct, even though the faeces of modern-day pets tend to be parasite-free thanks to preventive treatments. The case isn’t closed, he said, but “it’s a logical explanatio­n”.

James Serpell, a professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia veterinary school and editor of a recent textbook called The Domestic Dog: Its Evolution, Behavior and Interactio­ns With People, said he found that idea “plausible”.

But Serpell noted that the survey also found that coprophagi­c dogs were far more likely to be labelled “greedy eaters” by their owners, which he said might suggest dietary motivation­s. Previous research, Serpell said, has found that free-roaming dogs in developing countries, who must scavenge to fill their bellies, eat quite a lot of human faeces.

“Given its historical survival value, this common village dog behaviour may still be fairly widespread in the modern canine population.

“Modern dogs and cats are fed diets that are relatively rich in fats and protein, not all of which may be completely digested, making their faeces potentiall­y attractive as a second-hand food source.”

Clive Wynne, director of the Canine Science Collaborat­ory at Arizona State University, echoed that.

“The niche that dogs occupy is essentiall­y one of making a living on people’s leavings – and that isn’t just our leftovers from dinner, but what we put down the toilet, too. So it’s only from our human perspectiv­e that coprophagy seems strange,” he said.

Wynne said the survey also showed that stool-eaters had a greater tendency to eat dirt and cat faeces. That, he said, “is consistent with the idea that the behaviour is motivated by taste and dietary desires”.

But Wynne said the survey yielded another important finding.

It asked owners about their efforts to stop dogs from eating poop – whether with behaviour modificati­on, such as lacing stools with pepper or rewarding dogs that obeyed when told “leave it alone”, or by using any of 11 popular commercial products. All failed miserably.

“Owners reported success with store-bought products, many of which are tablets that make dogs’ own poop taste terrible, ranged from 0 to 2%.

“We’re going to be looking at some clinical trials on treatments that are different enough that they’ll stand a chance of working,” Hart said.

“We’re going to put our heads to this.” – Washington Post

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Archie And Angela Arendse.
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Celeste Kriel and Nazeem Joseph.
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