Why Is It Better To Spay/Neuter Your Dog?
Spay and Neuter surgery has long been regarded as an extremely
useful method of controlling the pet population. Naturally,
no one wishes to have a very large number of puppies which
finally end up in animal shelters for adoption or worse,
for euthanisation. And neutering or sterilizing the pets
ensures that this unhappy process does not occur.
Many shelters make it a policy to neuter the animals under
their care before they make them available for adoption
and some others which do not do so, nonetheless require
that the puppies which are supplied by them are sterilized
by their owners after they take them home.
There are advocacy groups which have been
demanding that all dogs be neutered/spayed unless the owners
buy permission from the authorities not to do so. And there
are less radical forums who, to avoid unwanted litters, advocate
that dog shelters necessarily sterilize each and every dog
that they send out into the wider world.
Then, of course, there are the opposing factions
who are vocal in their insistence that legislation requiring
sterilizing on a large scale is an infringement of the rights
of pet owners. That they must be left to decide for themselves
whether their dog requires to be spayed/neutered or not.
Many others think that sterilization is cruel.
They project their own feelings about the loss of reproductive
capacity on their pets. Many male dog owners have problems
in dealing with the neutering of their male dogs.
So where does one turn? Is it a good
policy to sterilize your dog or isn't it?
One can't but pay heed to the anti-sterilizing
brigade who, apart from the views expressed in the last paragraph,
also forward the notion that neutering a male dog turns him
into a sissy. And as for the females; they turn fat and lazy
if they are spayed and lament their lost capacity.
Let's attempt to cut through the layers of
pros and cons in viewpoints to see if we can come to a rational
conclusion about this issue.
Generally, it has been found that a pet owner
would have an easier time of it with a sterilized animal rather
than an unneutered/unspayed one. A dog that has been sterilized
will live a longer life, more free of illnesses than one which
hasn't.
Naturally, the benefits to his owner are
immense. He will not be beset with problems regarding the
health of his dog as frequently as he would otherwise have
been. And the pressure on his wallet would consequently be
much less as he would not have to visit the vet as frequently
as he would have to with an unsterilized dog.
A dog that has been sterilized has been found
to be more affectionate and loyal and to also show less of
a tendency to roam or run away. Obviously, these characteristics
make them much more desirable to keep as pets.
Which pet parent wouldn't like his dog to
reciprocate the deep affection that he feels for his adopted
doggy friend? And which owner would want to constantly be
in a state of tension fearing his dog might run away at any
time.
The other positive that emerges from sterilizing
a dog is that he displays far fewer behavioral and temperamental
problems than an unsterilized dog does. Psychologists have
been delving into the phenomenon as to why sterilized dogs
tend not to mark, bite or growl as much as unsterilized ones
do.
There is obviously a link between these two
circumstances but dog psychologists haven't, as yet, been
able to work out why.
The different ways that sterilizing
affects male dogs and females.
Male dogs, once neutered, will generally
not get into fights with other males. Therefore, the chances
of their getting injured become considerably less just as
the possibility of injuring someone else's pet also becomes
remote. They will be less prone to embarrass everyone in sight
by mounting people, other animals or furniture.
And a bitch in heat in the neighborhood won't
send him into a paroxysm of frustration. They will be far
easier to train largely because they will not be interested
in every passing dog as they will be more keen to please you.
As for the female of the species, they will
obviously not get the heat cycles for three weeks every six
months as intact females do. This is better than it sounds
because you will not have to bear the constant whimpering
and fussing that normally accompany these periods.
There will not be the mess of blood everywhere
nor the stink which accompanies it and you will not have all
the male dogs of the neighborhood come visiting.
Spayed females will never be stricken with
ovarian or uterine cancer as both the ovaries and uterus are
removed. And, strangely enough, spayed females will develop
a "mothering" nature and will adopt another dog
or even a child and become very attentive to them.
These then are the basic reasons for spaying/neutering
your dog. While some forums will keep protesting about the
infringement of their rights, all said and done, it is better
to spay/neuter your pet and have him/her lead a far happier
and trouble-free life than if they were intact.
Nancy Richards
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