Anti-Docking Alliance (A.D.A.) |
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The Campaign Against the Docking of Dogs' Tails |
A.D.A - The following report has not been peer reviewed and therefore has no scientific merit.
ADA reviews the misleading statistics as follows:-
The survey seems to apply to “working” dogs and not pets.
Working dogs may have been worked in non-welfare friendly conditions. It appears that some were sledding dogs.
Page 2 (highlighted paras) from which the figure below was cited.
There was a 26 litter cohort group who answered the questionnaire both in 1990 and 1991 (191 dogs).
(In 1991 TWELVE of these young dogs were DEAD! why? (6.3%)) leaving a total of 179 dogs in cohort group
In 1990 72 dogs had tail injuries (38%) = 51%
In 1991 20 dogs had tail injuries (13%)
i.e. There was a cumulative increase over 2 years (51%)
BUT THE RATE OF INJURY HAD DROPPED BY TWO THIRDS
in the second year
A total of 7 dogs had tails amputated in the report; less than the amount of dead dogs.
Statistics might show similar results with those of breeds with undocked tails used for field work such as English Pointers, Retrievers, Labradors, Setters etc. but no docking has been mandated for these breeds.
TAIL INJURIES OF SHORTHAIRED GERMAN POINTER DOGS BORN IN SWEDEN 1989
The Breed Council
- German Short-haired Pointer
The
Agricultural Advisor,
Graduate
of Agricultural College
Gunilla
Strejffert
Nybybagen
14
781
96 Borlange
23
February 1992
INTRODUCTION
The German Short-haired Pointer is a
pointing gundog of continental type
with Germany as its country of origin. In the background of
these dogs there is
Spanish, German and English blood.
century.
Setters.
The German Pointer is
The GSP was mainly used as a pointing gundog. It was also used as a
retriever
both on land and
sea, as a tracking/search dog, as a flushing dog etc. It has become
popular as a sled dog. Many
investigation during the late
autumn of 1991.
INVESTIGATION METHODS
During the late autumn of 1990 an interview investigation was carried
out
amongst the 53 litters
50 of these
litters were long-tailed. The
breeders were collected from the Swedish Kennel Club’s
annual register of
investigation, we asked
How many dogs in the litter received tail injuries,
The type and seriousness of the possible tail injury,
Possible tail amputations,
"Degree of strain in terrain" that the dogs
had been put through.
This investigation was followed up by a complementary interview
investigation in the litters
was set against
the relevant German Pointers’
During the autumn of 1991 a further investigation was carried out
(a
questionnaire
Pointers born
during 1989. The breeders
be able to follow up the changes. Replies were received from 26
breeders. To make it all more
from the 1990 investigation and
collated the material separately. We
were then able to compare the changes within one and same
group
during
1991 approximately 15 dogs had
injured their tails at
Some of the sledding dogs received tail injuries whilst being
trained.
investigation regarding 44 litters.
The investigation included
apparent that tail injuries had
to approximately 27% of the whole investigated group. Dogs were
somewhat
more affected
same dogs were now 24 to 30 months old. This
time we received
these
26 litters from the 1990
within the same group between 1990 and 1991.
these were still
1991. In 1990, we found 72 individuals with tail
injuries,
corresponding to 38%
injured individuals had
increased to 92, corresponding
more than 30%.
of 30% of tail injuries into the
larger investigation group,
increase in frequency of tail
the population of German Short-haired Pointers born during
1989. In other words, every third
tail has suffered from more or less serious
tail injuries.
and damaged tail tips, (the last 10cms of the
tail) with light,
medium and severe
difficult for
the injuries to heal),
how the tail injuries had changed between the
two years:
the liveliness of the dog and the tail,
how much and how intensive the dog is used/hunted and
of tail injuries increase and
the only solution was to amputate
the tail.
three dog tails (2 dogs and 1 bitch) were amputated. The dogs were
only
6, 6 and 11 months
old. In the later investigation it became
apparent that a further four
dogs (3 dogs and 1 bitch)
respectively.
fast movements in the
terrain.
tails was banned in Sweden.
of injuries on their long tails already in 1989. It can be noted
that
the dogs had not
continued to occur
during 1990 and 1991. The
The Swedish German Pointers Clubs breeding council carried out
investigations (interviews
of 1990 and 1991
respectively, regarding the
In the autumn of 1990 when the dogs were 1 - 1.5 years old,
27% of the
dogs had suffered from
group consisted of 44 litters, 299
individual dogs.
35% of the
dogs had suffered from
Types of tail injuries:
bleeding and damaged tail tips, with sometimes
difficult healing,
infected and inflamed tails,
lameness injuries and so called water tails and
The severity of the tail injuries: the tail injuries have in total
increased in severity up until
amputated dogs in the "more
adult" investigated age group are
known. The severity of the tail injuries seem to depend on the
liveliness of the dogs and the
more inclined to injury),
thicker the terrain in which the dog
works (mainly woodland in
dog’s tail
and the bigger the risk of amputation.
suffering from injuries
German Wire-haired Pointers. It shows similar
results. A
return to docking of
the age of three days is necessary.
Borlange, 23 February 1992
(signed)
Gunilla Strejffert
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The Campaign Against the Docking of Dogs' Tails |
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