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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
July
Constant din of barking
causes stress, behavior changes in dogs in shelters
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
7/25/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Crista
Coppola, an adjunct instructor in veterinary medicine,
says the excessive noise in animal shelters can "physically
stress dogs and lead to behavioral,
physiological and anatomical responses.”
Coppola adopted 10-month-old Casey from the Champaign
County Humane Society. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— If your neighbor’s barking dog drives you crazy, pity
the employees of the nation’s animal shelters, where the noise
produced by howling, barking and yapping dogs often exceeds that produced
by a jackhammer.
And pity the poor dogs.
“While employees may wear hearing protectors, dogs don’t
have that option,” said Crista Coppola, an adjunct instructor
in the department of veterinary medicine
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “Excessive
noise in shelters can physically stress dogs and lead to behavioral,
physiological and anatomical responses.”
In a paper published in the spring issue of the Journal of Applied Animal
Welfare Science, Coppola and co-authors R. Mark Enns and Temple Grandin,
both at Colorado State University, describe noise measurements made
at an animal shelter built in 1999.
“Noise levels regularly exceeded the measuring capacity of our
noise dosimeter, which was 118.9 decibels,” said Coppola, who
is also a behavior fellow at the Midwest office of the American Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in Urbana. “These levels
were higher than that produced by a jackhammer (110 decibels). The Occupational
Safety and Health Administration recommends hearing protection be worn
at noise levels above 90 decibels.”
A common noise problem in shelters occurs when dogs are placed in gated
kennels along the perimeter of a large room. The dogs receive negative
stimulation when they see other dogs, especially when they see other
dogs receiving attention.
“Dogs are a very social species,” Coppola said. “They
want to be around other dogs. When they see other dogs, but can’t
get to them, you hear a lot of frustration barking back and forth.”
A better design places dogs in individual rooms surrounding a common
play area, Coppola said. Each room has two doors: One leads into the
play area and the other – in the opposite wall – is used
by shelter staff to access the room for adoption visits.
“Two or more dogs could be admitted to the play area at a time,”
Coppola said. “This is a wonderful way to exercise the dogs and
let them receive the social interaction they want and need.”
Cohabitation is another way to reduce both noise and stress in dogs,
Coppola said. Dogs housed in social groups vocalize less, sleep more
and show fewer abnormal behaviors. Cohabitation has worked well in Germany
and Japan, but has been slow to catch on in the U.S.
Retrofitting shelters can be costly, but even in new construction, noise-abatement
designs are often overlooked. Fortunately, in addition to physical surroundings,
there are other ways to reduce stress in dogs.
In a separate study, published in the spring issue of the journal Physiology
and Behavior, Coppola, Enns and Grandin examined the effect of human
contact on stress response of shelter dogs.
In the study, dogs were treated to scheduled human contact, which included
grooming, petting and playing, for an average of 45 minutes on their
second day in the shelter. A control group did not received scheduled
human contact.
To objectively compare stress levels, the researchers measured the amount
of salivary cortisol, a hormone recognized as a major indicator of stress
response. Dogs that engaged in human contact had much lower cortisol
levels on day three than dogs that did not engage in human contact.
“Day three is usually the most stressful,” Coppola said.
“The dogs have not yet begun to acclimate, and have reached their
tolerance level of responding to unpredictable surroundings.”
Extra human contact was influential in reducing the stressful effects
of shelter housing, Coppola said. “Keeping dogs behaviorally healthy
helps keep them physically healthy. And healthy, unstressed dogs have
a tendency to be more calm and relaxed.”
Excessive noise not only affects shelter animals and employees, it can
affect potential adopters, as well.
“Visitors are sometimes driven off by excessive noise,”
Coppola said. “As we work to reduce that noise, we ask potential
adopters to please bear it for the amount of time necessary to find
an appropriate dog. Your new pet will thank you.”
Funding was provided by Grandin Livestock Inc. and the Eugene V. and
Clare E. Thaw Charitable Trust.
Editor’s note: To reach Crista Coppola, e-mail: ccoppola@uiuc.edu.
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