| Literature DB >> 29851313 |
Benjamin L Hart1, Lynette A Hart2, Abigail P Thigpen2, Alisha Tran1, Melissa J Bain3.
Abstract
Canine conspecific coprophagy, the tendency or predisposition of some dogs to eat their own faeces or those of other dogs, seems paradoxical because dogs typically show an aversion to conspecific faeces. In an attempt to resolve this paradox, we set out to determine the factors associated with the occurrence of this behaviour and to evaluate the efficacy of 11 products marketed for treating coprophagy as well as behaviour modification procedures. Because a large sample of dogs was needed to address these issues, two web-based surveys were utilized. One, intended to compare coprophagic dogs and non-coprophagic dogs, yielded 1552 returns. The other, yielding 1475 usable returns, specifically recruited owners of coprophagic dogs to gather information about the characteristics of coprophagy and treatment success. The findings revealed that 16% of dogs sampled engaged in frequent conspecific coprophagy, defined as having been seen eating stools at least six times. No evidence was found relating the coprophagy to diet or the dog's age. Coprophagic dogs were as easily house trained as non-coprophagic dogs, suggesting a normal aversion to faeces. Coprophagic dogs were more likely to be reported as greedy eaters than non-coprophagic dogs. The reported success rate of the commercial products and behaviour modification approaches was close to zero, indicating that the behaviour is not readily changed. The coprophagy was overwhelmingly directed at fresh stools, defined as being no more than 2 days old. A hypothesis is offered that coprophagy reflects a tendency inherited from the ancestral wolf to keep the den area free of faecal-borne intestinal parasites that might be deposited in the den resting area and would typically have parasite ova that are not initially infective, but could develop infective larvae after 2 days. An evolved parasite defence strategy to consume fresh faeces in the rest area would be adaptive.Entities:
Keywords: canine; coprophagy; dogs; faeces eating; stool eating
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29851313 PMCID: PMC5980124 DOI: 10.1002/vms3.92
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Med Sci ISSN: 2053-1095
Survey 1; Dog behavior, the rest of the story
| Categories of Questions |
|---|
| Demographic data, such as number of dogs in household, sex, age, breed of dog |
| Yard space available to dogs |
| Ease of housetraining |
| Type of food given |
| Type of eater: finicky; greedy; normal |
| Dog's level of affection |
| Problem behaviors the dog has from list of 10 |
| Howling at sirens |
| Eating non‐nutritional material other than grass or stools of dogs |
| Frequency of grass or plant eating |
| For stool eaters: frequency of eating stools: daily; weekly; monthly; yearly |
| For stool eaters: dog mostly eats only own stools; only stools of other dogs; both |
| For stool eaters: age of stools mostly eaten: 1–2 days; 2–4 days; >4 days |
Survey 2; why dogs eat stools
| Categories of Questions |
|---|
| Demographic data, such as number of dogs in household, sex, age, breed of dog |
| Ease of housetraining |
| Type of food given |
| Type of eater: finicky; greedy; normal |
| Dog's level of affection |
| Problem behaviors the dog has from list of 10 |
| Frequency of grass or plant eating |
| Age that stool eating first noticed |
| Total times observed eating stools |
| Whether dog mostly eats only own stools; only stools of other dogs; both |
| Age of stools mostly eaten: 1–2 days; 2–4 days; >4 days |
| Frequency of eating stools: daily; weekly; monthly; yearly |
| Ways that you know a stool was eaten |
| Behavior modification treatments tried from a list of 7 and success of treatment |
| Commercial treatments tried from a list of 11 and success of treatment |
Stepwise logistic regression analyses of factors related to coprophagy
| Factor | Parameter | Chi sq |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Greedy eating | 0.86 | 27.90 | <0.0001 |
| Breed group | NA | 20.79 | 0.0077 |
| Multiple dogs in household | 0.62 | 11.07 | 0.0005 |
| Eating dirt | 1.70 | 14.72 | 0.0001 |
| Eating cat stools | 0.51 | 10.84 | 0.001 |
See text for more details. The parameter measure for breed group evaluated nine different breed groups, each with a different value, so this is indicated as NA.
Food additives and pills marketed for coprophagia
| Name of product | Responses for product | Per cent reporting success |
|---|---|---|
| For‐Bid® | 352 | 1 |
| Deter® | 238 | 1 |
| Dis‐Taste® | 154 | 1 |
| Coproban® | 58 | 2 |
| S.E.P® | 58 | 0 |
| Stop Stool Eat® | 27 | 0 |
| Stop Tablets® | 26 | 0 |
| Potty Mouth® | 24 | 0 |
| NaturVet Deter® | 20 | 0 |
| Nasty Habit® | 13 | 0 |
| 21st Century® | 6 | 0 |
Responders were given a list of products and asked to say if the stool eating in their specified dog was resolved. Shown are the 11 products found, as of the writing of the paper. Some of these are dispensed through a veterinarian and some sold over the counter. The survey did not explore the degree to which the respondent closely followed directions on the label.
Intestinal Parasites found in scats of wild wolves and other canids
| Helminths (parasitic worms) |
| Cestodes (tapeworms) |
| Taenia spp., Echinococcus spp. Require ingestion by an intermediate host before infecting definitive host |
| Trematodes (flatworms or flukes) |
| Alaria spp. Require two intermediate hosts in water. Common in wolves, not dogs |
| Nematodes (roundworms) |
| Ancylostomidae and Uncinaria spp. Hook worms. Larvae develop into infective forms in the ova 2–9 days after being shed in the faeces. Infective larvae then develop in the environment (soil) and can then penetrate the skin of hosts. |
| Trichuris spp. Whipworms. Infective larvae develop in ova of shed faeces after 10–25 days |
| Toxocara spp. Ascarids. Infective larvae develop in ova in shed faeces in 2–4 weeks |
| Strongyloides spp. Pinworms or threadworms. Infective larvae hatch from ova in faeces in 2–3 days, and typically infect through the skin. Infections are usually mild. |
| Coccidea (single cell parasites) |
| Isospora spp. Oocysts develop into infective sporulated oocysts in faeces in 3‐5 days |
Listed above is a classification of different genera of intestinal parasites found in dogs and in scats of wild wolves (Bynum et al. 1977; Custer & Pencet 1981; Stancampo & Francisci 1993; Marquard‐Peterson 1997; Kloch & Bajer 2005). In wild canids, several species are generally mentioned. The various parasite species of each type have the same basic life cycle. Note that the various parasite types require either an intermediate host before being infective, or require at least 2 days of development in the faeces, before being infective to the canid that is the definitive host. Life cycle information summarized from various resources (Bowman 2014).