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Tag: pets

  • Dogs, Cats Could Lower Children’s Allergy Risk

    Dogs, Cats Could Lower Children’s Allergy Risk

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    March 29, 2023 – If your little one has been begging for a furry friend, there may be another reason to give in. 

    New research shows that exposure to indoor cats and dogs in utero or early infancy leads to fewer cases of food allergies as the child grows. Over 65,000 children were tested. and 22% who were exposed to pets had fewer food allergies than those who were not tested, according to the findings published Tuesday in the journal PLOS One. The study was done in Japan.

    Children exposed to indoor cats were less likely to have soybean, wheat, and egg allergies. When exposed to dogs, children were less likely to have nut, egg, and milk allergies. Surprisingly, children who were exposed to hamsters were 0.9% more likely to have nut allergies.

    “Studies asking these kinds of questions are really important because they have a lot of relevance to real life, and this one included many kids,” said Joyce Yu, MD, a pediatric allergist and immunologist at New York-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center. Yu was not involved in the new study. 

    We know Americans love our pets. Around 25% of American households (about 32 million) have a cat, and dogs are found in a whopping 48 million Americans households, according to U.S. pet ownership statistics.

    We asked allergists and immunologists the science behind why having pets leads to fewer food allergies.

    The ‘Hygiene Hypothesis’

    The findings can be attributed to “the hygiene hypothesis,” spearheaded in 1989 by British epidemiologist David Strachan, the experts say. This hypothesis says that being around indoor pets in utero or early infancy can lead to fewer cases of allergies as a child grows, said Sebastian Lighvani, MD, an allergist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

    “The exposure to pets in utero or during early infancy alters the microbiome of the infants and the mother in a positive way, which then promotes immune tolerance to allergens rather than development of sensitization of food allergies,” Lighvani said. 

    Past studies found that children who grew up on a farm had fewer instances of allergies than those in urban areas. Therefore, children who grow up in a “hygienic” environment with less exposure to pets can be at a higher risk of having allergies during adulthood, said Juris A. Grasis, PhD, an assistant professor at the School of Natural Sciences at the University of California, Merced. 

    Pets and Allergens in the U.S.

    Some allergists say that it is highly likely that the results can be mirrored in the U.S. The number of allergy cases in the U.S. has skyrocketed over the years. About 20 million Americans have food allergies, according to the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. 

    Lighvani credits the increase to changes to a process called epigenetics. This is when the genetic makeup you inherit from your parents is turned on by environmental exposure. The genes get methylated – which is when a gene is adjusted, mostly during early childhood – leading to allergic genes. 

    As an example, Lighvani used the rise in peanut allergies in children’s classrooms. “If you ask who has peanut allergies, over half the kids might raise their hands because there is such a high prevalence of it in such a short period of time – 20, 30, 40 epigenetic years,” he said. 

    Some experts are skeptical that the U.S. would have similar results as the PLOS One study. The U.S. varies greatly in population size and region, which can make things tricky. “The East Coast is different from the Midwest in terms of how our pets live with us,” said Yu

    Say Yes to Pets 

    For pet lovers – or those who are “pet curious” – the Japan study is extremely encouraging, said Grasis. The best part: You don’t need to live on a farm or in a rural area to get these health benefits. Having your pet share indoor space with your infant will do just fine. 

    “Simply sharing the indoor habitat with a cat or dog as a child gives benefits that can reduce food allergies as an adult,” he said. 

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  • World Dog Alliance Congratulates Jakarta for Banning Dog and Cat Meat

    World Dog Alliance Congratulates Jakarta for Banning Dog and Cat Meat

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    The World Dog Alliance (WDA) congratulates Jakarta for banning dog and cat meat. Jakarta is the most populous metropolitan area in Indonesia, comprising the capital. The ban could save hundreds of dogs from the slaughterhouse every day.

    Every year, over 30 million dogs are slaughtered for food in Asia, most of them are strays or stolen family pets. In Jakarta, about 10,000 dogs were killed every month for meat even though 93% of people in Indonesia are against the practice of eating dog meat. The industry has long caused concerns on animal abuse and zoonotic diseases such as rabies.

    Jakarta’s Food Security, Marine and Agriculture Department recently confirmed the city has become the 21st jurisdiction in Indonesia to ban the barbaric practice. Ibu Ir. Suharini Eliawati M.Si, Head of the Food Security and Agriculture Department for Jakarta said, “Current progress is the formation of a Food Regulation to ban the dog meat trade … The plan is also to educate people to not consume dog meat, and to be responsible animal owners.”

    The World Dog Alliance (WDA) is an international animal protection organization that campaigns to eradicate dog and cat meat globally. The WDA’s official website shares their experience on successful legislation around the world. Since 2020, the website has recorded the most visitors from Indonesia, who accounted for over 50% of the total visitors in July and August 2021.

    Under the advocacy of the WDA, the United States outlawed dog and cat meat in the 2018 Farm Bill, many believe the ban has inspired other Asian countries to prohibit this practice to enhance their international image.

    In 2020, Chinese cities of Shenzhen and Zhuhai have outlawed dog and cat meat. In 2021, the South Korean government established the Dog Meat Discussion Committee to reach social consensus on banning dog meat; Vietnamese city Hoi An also committed to stopping the trade and consumption of dog and cat meat.

    To accelerate the global legislative process, the WDA proposed the International Agreement to Prohibit the Eating of Dogs and Cats in 2019. Over 200 legislators from the U.S., Japan, U.K., Norway and Sweden have signed joint letters to their heads of government to show support for this cause. In 2023, the WDA will continue working with members of the U.S. Congress to call for the initiation of the International Agreement.

    Genlin, founder of the WDA, praises Indonesia for its huge progress: “The ban is significant considering Jakarta is the capital city of the country; it may serve as a role model for other cities to follow suit. I hope the Indonesian government will make this a national ban in the near future.”

    Jakarta’s ban comes after the central government reacted to shocking evidence of the dog and cat meat industry, and called upon all provincial, regency and city authorities to take action to discourage dog and cat meat consumption. The Director of Veterinary Public Health described the treatment of the dogs and cats as “torture for animals” and stated that “dog meat or any animal that is not registered as farm animals, is illegal (…) Foreign countries find a low standard of animal welfare and cruelty unacceptable and will stop visiting Indonesia, which is bad for tourism.”

    World Dog Alliance (WDA) was founded in 2014. It has launched global legislative campaigns calling for an end to the barbaric practice of eating dog and cat meat, and has achieved milestone after milestone with the successful passage of laws in countries and regions. 

    Source: World Dog Alliance

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  • In a twist of fate, Afghanistan military dog set to reunite with its owner in the U.S.

    In a twist of fate, Afghanistan military dog set to reunite with its owner in the U.S.

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    During a tour in Afghanistan in 2019, Kristen St. Pierre, a female platoon commander for the Georgia Army National Guard, became really close to a colleague that she thought she may never see again: her bomb-sniffing dog Chase.

    St. Pierre, 30, was Chase’s handler as she led her 38-soldier platoon on “guardian angel” missions throughout Kabul and the surrounding areas. Chase, whose skill set was explosives and narcotics, would lead the route and conduct security sweeps of the perimeter before meetings. She spent nearly every day with Chase: he slept in her room while she fed him and took him on walks.

    “It brought so much relief and a piece of humanity to have a dog on base,” says St. Pierre. 

    Chase and his handler Kristen St. Pierre pose during one of his rounds with some local women in Afghanistan.

    Photo courtesy of Kristen St. Pierre


    When St. Pierre’s tour ended, Chase stayed behind working. She missed him terribly but received updates daily via texts and photos about the pup’s adventures by this new handler. 

    Then Kabul fell. 

    On August 15, 2021, the Taliban took control of Afghanistan and its capital, capping a 20-year fight following their ouster by a U.S. military coalition. Chaotic weeks and months followed as U.S. troops withdrew and Afghans fled in droves.

    St. Pierre reached out to Chase’s handler hoping he would be able to get out.

    “I heard Chase and other dogs would be on flights to the U.S. and Europe,” she says. “The next I heard the dogs weren’t allowed on the planes and they were released from the airport with little chance of survival.” 

    image6.jpg
    St. Pierre petting Chase, a military bomb-sniffing dog, while taking a break in Afghanistan.

    Photo courtesy of Kristen St. Pierre


    For months St. Pierre was in the dark about Chase, fearing the worst. The winter following the U.S. withdrawal was harsh; security conditions in the country quickly deteriorated as food and fuel grew scarce. Families struggled to survive amid a rapidly changing landscape, with the Taliban rolling back media freedoms and rights for women and girls. 

    The sudden waves of desperate refugees and the economic downfall made headlines around the world, as a country of 40 million people plunged into a deep crisis. 

    But for the American founder of Kabul Small Animal Rescue, Charlotte Maxwell-Jones, the work continued.

    It was her determination and a twist of fate that brought news about Chase to St. Pierre – and now they are about to be reunited after two years of waiting.

    Maxwell-Jones has been living in Kabul since 2015. She first arrived in 2010 to conduct fieldwork for a PhD in classical art and archaeology from the University of Michigan. She fell in love with the country and its people, lived there part-time while she earned her doctorate and in 2015 returned for good.

    0p6a8142.jpg
    In Kabul, children play with animals outside of one of Kabul Small Animal Rescue’s clinics. The rescue runs 15 clinics in Afghanistan.

    CBS News


    While working for various nonprofits and conducting independent research, Maxwell-Jones started to rescue stray dogs and cats. She founded Kabul Small Animal Rescue in 2018 and formalized the organization in 2019. The organization, which operates with funds from individual donors, grew to 15 clinics and a staff of 85.

    But since the Taliban came to power, the challenges have grown dramatically. Maxwell-Jones returned to Afghanistan before the fall to ensure she would be able to stay in the country and help the animals.  

    photo-2023-03-07-13-12-29.jpg
    After the fall of Afghanistan, Chase and other U.S. military working dogs couldn’t leave the country. They were sent to kennels or left on the streets. 

    Photo courtesy of Kabul Small Animal Rescue


    Maxwell-Jones has had to switch to an all-male staff and navigating the new laws that seem to come out daily has been challenging, she told CBS News. When the Taliban took over, Kabul Small Animal Rescue was told that it could not have female staff, she says. The organization continued to pay female staffers’ salaries until many of them left for Pakistan and two female veterinarians went to the United Kingdom, she said.

    “The co-ed environment is missed, but we are committed to helping animals and will do it under whatever laws are in place,” Maxwell-Jones says.

    Despite the hardships, Maxwell-Jones, 40, has tried to keep Kabul Small Animal Rescue focused on its core mission. She has been sending dogs and cats back to the U.S. with the help of the Dubai-based organization Pawsome Pets, which assists rescue groups with relocating abandoned animals to facilitate animal exporting. In January, KSAR shipped 11 dogs. The plan is to send Chase home with four other dogs. “Ideally we would like to do at least 10-12 per month, but it’s hard,” says Maxwell-Jones.

    A picture of Charlotte Maxwell-Jones, the founder of Kabul Small Animal Rescue, and two dogs.
    Charlotte Maxwell-Jones, the founder of Kabul Small Animal Rescue, spends time with two rescues. She started the organization in 2018. 

    CBS News


    Maxwell-Jones stays in part because she loves the country, but she also fears there “wouldn’t be enough glue and motivation to keep this place running.” If KSAR closed, she says, no other organization exists to take care of the animals, in particular, the stray dogs and cats.

    Susan Chadima, a Maine-based veterinarian, travels to Kabul every few months to give KSAR’s team medical training.

    “KSAR became the only organization that stayed, providing care for both owned and street dogs, and helping to facilitate the transport of loved, owned pets to their owners in the West,” she says. 

    For almost a year, St. Pierre had no news about Chase until a mutual contact told her about KSAR. Unbeknownst to St. Pierre, Maxwell-Jones had found Chase at kennels owned by a local mine detection company north of Kabul in late November 2022.

    photo-2023-03-07-13-14-07.jpg
    Kabul Small Animal Rescue founder Charlotte Maxwell-Jones found Chase at kennels owned by a local mine detection company north of Kabul in late November 2022.

    Photo courtesy of Kabul Small Animal Rescue


    “It was pretty sad, he was in sorry shape,” said Maxwell-Jones. The white spaniel with furry brown spots was nervous but affectionate when he was found, she said.

    Back in the United States, St. Pierre searched KSAR’s social media accounts daily, hoping to see a photo of Chase. One day she did.  

    “I gasped,” says St. Pierre, who said her mother-in-law ran into the kitchen to make sure everything was okay. “I screamed ‘Chase! Chase! Chase!’ I just couldn’t believe he was alive.” 

    She contacted KSAR and told them about their time in Afghanistan and the work that Chase did. She asked about the process to get him to the U.S. and if it was possible to adopt him.  

    Together they were able to piece together Chase’s history and set up a fundraiser for $3,500 to bring him home. The first day they raised $4,405 in six hours, said St. Pierre.

    In the meantime, St. Pierre has started a new chapter of her life; she retired from the military and is now working as an operating room nurse. She is also pregnant with her first child. 

    “Chase is very loved and a lot of people are ready for him to get home,” she says.

    Maxwell-Jones has been working on securing permissions for Chase to leave Afghanistan, but paperwork and bureaucracy have held up his departure. When Chase can leave the country and be reunited with St. Pierre is still unknown. 

    Reporting contributed by Ahmad Mukhtar

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  • TOMMISMART Launches Revolutionary Video Creation Tool for Pet Owners and Content Creators

    TOMMISMART Launches Revolutionary Video Creation Tool for Pet Owners and Content Creators

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    The world’s first HD AI camera for cute pet short videos. Perfect for creating viral online pet videos. Filming + editing + sharing = a Pickfun camera

    TOMMISMART TECHNOLOGY LTD. has recently launched the world’s first high-definition, self-made camera for cute pet short videos. This intelligent product, Pickfun, is a camera designed to create internet-famous, cute pets. Having a Pickfun camera means pet owners get an exclusive photographer and a professional editor for free, allowing the pet owners to capture every cute and interesting moment of the owner’s pet and turn them into the next internet sensation. Learn more: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/pickfun/pickfun-ai-pet-camera-short-video-maker?ref=d72ker

    TOMMISMART believes that pets are important family members for their owners and they don’t want to miss the lovely moments with their pets. However, filming short videos of pets is not an easy task. The appearance of Pickfun solves this problem. It is a high-definition, self-made camera that captures every unique moment of your pet. Pickfun can automatically edit the filmed footage into short videos and add dynamic subtitles, music, special effects, etc., allowing the customer to easily create professional pet short videos.

    One of the unique features of Pickfun is it integrates AI video creation into a pet camera. With dual lens and AI, the camera can recognize the pet and track the movement of the pet automatically; pet owners can easily capture all of their pet’s best moments from two different angles and never miss a moment. Plus, the real-time monitoring and two-way talk features allow pet owners to stay connected with their pets no matter where they are.

    But Pickfun is more than just a pet camera. With automatic filming and short video creation features, content creators can easily create engaging and funny videos to share with their followers. And the “pet square” in the Pickfun App (released on both Google Play and Apple App Store) connects pet owners where they can share videos created by Pickfun and get inspired by other pet owners’ creations.

    Pickfun was developed by TOMMISMART TECHNOLOGY  LTD., which has many years of experience in the field of computer vision. The company’s core team has been studying facial recognition technology for many years and has rich experience in research and development of computer vision algorithms, product development, and customer service.

    “The birth of Pickfun stems from our love for pets and our persistence in innovation,” said the CEO of Pickfun, Luo Bin. “We hope to help pet owners better record and share their pet’s life, making pets become cute and popular stars on social media. We believe that Pickfun will become the favorite of pet owners worldwide.”

    Currently, Pickfun is available for early-bird sales, and the Pickfun team is expecting customers’ feedback. Learn more: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/pickfun/pickfun-ai-pet-camera-short-video-maker?ref=d72ker

    Source: TOMMISMART TECHNOLOGY LTD.

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  • Opinion: America’s taste in family pets is changing — for the better, in my view | CNN

    Opinion: America’s taste in family pets is changing — for the better, in my view | CNN

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    Editor’s Note: Urmee Khan is a London-based journalist with more than two decades of experience in TV, print and online media. She is founder of Rakhana, a media consultancy. The views expressed in this commentary are her own. Read more opinion at CNN.



    CNN
     — 

    It would be easy to dismiss French bulldogs, with their squidgy, cartoon faces and small squat bodies, as little more than a handbag accessory. Some people might even see them as little more than a conversation piece affording the pretext to gossip about a favorite music star or actor. And no one can deny the trend: Celebrities everywhere are photographed toting a baby Frenchie in a shoulder bag, or holding one at the end of an expensive designer leash.

    But while it’s true that these dogs have become a runaway favorite among celebrities, the breed has lot more than that to recommend it. I don’t claim to be impartial, however. I have been sharing my London living quarters for the past decade with a brindle-coated French bulldog who is the joy of my life.

    It comes as no surprise to me that the French bulldog has supplanted the Labrador retriever as America’s most popular dog, ending the sporting dog’s 31-year reign. Many people might be wondering how a country that for decades has preferred the outgoing, high-energy Labrador would swap it out for a pint-sized, sedentary, furry gargoyle.

    Even where I live in Britain, one could read the tea leaves: America’s tastemakers and trendsetters have been making French Bulldogs their canine of choice for years. Music stars from Lady Gaga to 2 Chainz, Megan Thee Stallion and Snoop Dogg have one, as do some of Hollywood’s most famous celebrities, including Hugh Jackman, The Rock and Reese Witherspoon.

    The French bulldog’s popularity is not just a reflection of a desire to imitate the habits and predilections of the rich and famous, however. My personal theory is that it reflects the changing nature of what many Americans are looking for in a family pet. In the post-Covid era, these more inward-looking times call for a pup that is less demanding, a pet whose company you can enjoy within the quiet and solace of your four walls.

    Urmee Khan with her French bulldog, Bertie.

    You didn’t need to be a psychic to see the change coming. Last year, the ever-popular National Dog Show – America’s premier competition for purebred dogs and something of an arbiter in trends about which breeds will be up-and-comers – saw a French bulldog by the name of Winston emerge victorious, beating out hundreds of other canines.

    The show’s host sized up the breed pretty well, and got to the root of what makes Frenchies so appealing, in saying that Winston (as well as his handler) “have cornered the market on energy, enthusiasm and just pure spunk.”

    “Spunk” is what Frenchies have no shortage of. They are, in short, total clowns. These pint-sized gremlins are about the most entertaining companions one can ever wish to have. My delightful Bertie (also known as “Berts” and “Bertle”) snacks on cooked carrots, Bonios – his favorite brand of dog treat – and sardines. He has his own Instagram account: @bertie_french_bulldog. Bernie abhors walking in the rain, the washing machine and horror films. (The scary music soundtracks send him racing to hide in the bath.)

    Frenchies are very stubborn little beings; they are fiercely independent and they have a charming and pugnacious personality. They also possess, in no small measure, qualities that some people would consider drawbacks in a human companion: They sulk, emit noxious fumes, snore, grunt and regularly give you very judgmental side-eyes. But in a furry friend that fits in the crook of your arm, what could be more appealing?

    These dogs are quite sociable, which is unsurprising given they were originally bred in the early 1800s as companion dogs to lace workers in Nottingham, England, according to the American Kennel Club.

    “Perhaps these miniaturized bulldogs ate less food and took up less room in the tight quarters that were all the women could afford with their meager wages. Maybe they fit snugly on a lap, where they made an attractive detour for fleas that were otherwise human-bound,” the AKC said on its site.

    “What we do know is that the lace workers were so smitten by their funny little bulldogs that when the Industrial Revolution eliminated their jobs completely, they took the dogs with them across the English Channel to the Normandy area in northern France.”

    In short, these darling toy bulldogs emigrated from Britain some 200 years ago and were repatriated as “French.” And who could blame the French for claiming them as their own?

    If there is any drawback to the breed, it’s that some have been found to have breathing problems: those adorable squished-flat faces can be cute, but respiratory difficulties have been know to be an issue for some of them.

    02 Urmee Khan French Bulldog

    You have to be mindful not to over-exercise them, and hot climates can be a no-go for the same reason. Luckily, I’ve not had any issues with Bertie in this regard. His breathing has always been fine. He once overheated, but a cold tea towel and a Bonio set things right.

    There is one other concern: Their portability and desirability make them the target of dognappers. The violent armed robbery of Gaga’s French bulldogs made headlines a couple of years back, but even dogs belonging to owners with a far more modest profile have been known to be nabbed. Some owners of Frenchies have learned the trick of tightly wrapping their dog’s leash around their hand at all times and never letting their pooch out of their sight.

    No offense to other breeds, but I somehow suspect that, even after the mighty Labrador’s impressive run, it might take more than 30 years for French bulldogs to be dethroned from the top spot in Americans’ hearts.

    Bertie keeps our friends and the community entertained with his daily refusal to walk, his daft antics – his zoomies and spins – and an assortment of neat party tricks: He can walk on his hind legs like a pocket-sized dinosaur, plays dead when he gets “shot” and liberally gives high fives and “fist bumps.”

    But he’s also a gentle soul. Bertie has been invited to many children’s tea parties and sleepovers and has endured wearing a dress, a fez and being a unicorn. He has even won over my traditional Muslim parents and siblings, who agree he’s a “good boy” and are amused by his comic personality.

    Can a Labrador do those things? Maybe. Probably, even. Can they do them as adorably as a French bulldog? I have a hard time imagining that that could ever be the case.

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  • Lack of canine COVID-19 data fuels persisting concerns over dog-human interactions

    Lack of canine COVID-19 data fuels persisting concerns over dog-human interactions

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    Newswise — WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Early COVID-19 pandemic suspicions about dogs’ resistance to the disease have given way to a long-haul clinical data gap as new variants of the virus have emerged.

    “It is not confirmed that the virus can be transmitted from one dog to another dog or from dogs to humans,” said veterinarian Mohamed Kamel, a postdoctoral fellow at Purdue University.

    During the pandemic’s early days, dogs seemed resistant to the coronavirus, showing little evidence of infection or transmission, said Mohit Verma, assistant professor of agricultural and biological engineering and Purdue’s Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering. “As the virus evolved, or maybe the surveillance technology advanced, there seem to be more instances of potentially asymptomatic dogs.”

    These are among the findings that Kamel, Verma and two co-authors summarized in a research literature review “Interactions Between Humans and Dogs in the COVID-19 Pandemic.” The summary, with recent updates and future perspectives, recently appeared in a special issue of the journal Animals on Susceptibility of Animals to SARS-CoV-2.

    Additional co-authors are Rachel Munds, a research scientist at Krishi Inc. and a Purdue visiting scholar in the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, and Amr El-Sayed of Egypt’s Cairo University.

    Last June the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service announced it was committing up to $24 million for research related to SARS-CoV-2. The funding, provided by the American Rescue Plan Act, focuses on the One Health concept, which recognizes the link between the health of people, animals and the environment.

    The SARS-CoV-2 virus that originated in Wuhan, China, in 2019 has infected more than 600 million people globally and had claimed more than 6.5 million lives by October 2022.

    “COVID-19 has become one of the most important economic, health and humanitarian problems of the 21st century,” the co-authors wrote in the Animals article. Studies have documented the movement of the SARS-CoV-2 virus through various animal species. And about 75 percent of infectious diseases in humans start in animals.

    “This spread raises concerns about the possibility of pet animals serving as reservoirs for the virus,” the co-authors wrote.

    More than two dozen animal species have been infected by SARS-CoV-2 virus, ranging from cats, dogs and rabbits to deer, cattle and gorillas. More than 470 million dogs were owned worldwide before the COVID-19 outbreak. Their susceptibility to the virus remains poorly understood because they are infrequently tested, said Kamel, who is also a faculty member at Cairo University.

    “Compared to cats or other animals, the susceptibility is less,” Kamel said. He cautioned, however, that the susceptibility of dogs to the new variants may have changed to a lesser or greater extent.

    “There are a lot of variants. It’s not only one virus,” Kamel said. “The infections differ from the old variant to the new variant.”

    Dogs’ apparent resistance to COVID-19 could result from their general low levels of the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE2), target receptors in their lung cells and related mutations.

    “ACE2 is the main part of the virus attachment found on the cells,” Kamel noted.

    The Animals journal article also discusses how the spread of an epidemic can be tracked, predicted and contained through a combination of geographic information systems, molecular biology and even detection dogs. Because of their heightened sense of smell, dogs can be trained to detect a wide range of human diseases, Kamel said. Using dogs to detect COVID-19, as reported in the journal article, is fast and less expensive compared to other methods where screening large crowds may be needed.

    Verma’s startup, Krishi Inc., is already developing innovative paper-based, rapid-result tests for bovine respiratory disease, antimicrobial resistance and COVID-19. The testing system uses a method called loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) and is under development in Verma’s lab for produce safety applications. Adapting LAMP for animal testing of SARS-CoV-2 may come next.

    Krishi Inc. received an initial investment from Ag-Celerator. Created in 2015, Ag-Celerator is a $2 million innovation fund designed to provide critical startup support for Purdue innovators who bring Purdue’s patented intellectual property or “know-how” technologies to market. The fund is operated by Purdue Ventures with assistance from the Purdue University College of Agriculture, the Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization and the agriculture industry.

    The Animals journal article cites multiple studies from Purdue and elsewhere validating the usefulness of LAMP testing. Krishi’s focus thus far has been developing a test for antimicrobial resistance in animals, but the LAMP assay has broader potential, Verma said.

    “If we want to do widespread surveillance, can we make our test versatile for any species? LAMP is portable,” Verma said. “Because it can be done in a simple manner and provide results without a lab setup, we can potentially do this on a wider scale and make it cost-effective.”

    Currently available commercial at-home coronavirus tests for humans can also be used on dogs and cats. However, these tests may not be sensitive enough to detect the lower viral loads in animals.

    “They’re not validated for animals, so we don’t know how well they would work. That’s the gap we’re hoping to bridge with the test that we are developing – better tools of surveillance,” Verma said.

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  • Treat Your Employees and Their Dogs to Some Relaxation | Entrepreneur

    Treat Your Employees and Their Dogs to Some Relaxation | Entrepreneur

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    Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you’ll find interesting and useful. If you purchase them, Entrepreneur may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners.

    Nearly 70% of U.S. households have a dog. If some of your employees have dogs, it may be a hit with your team and your customers to bring in a few furry friends, and you can help keep all the dogs distracted with a dedicated dog streaming service.

    DOGTV is a 24/7 channel of programs developed to appeal to dogs and help them relax. If you want to create a calming dog daycare at your business, a lifetime subscription to DOGTV is just $149. That’s the best price online.

    Just like their owners, dogs can relax in front of the TV, too. However, it has to be the right kind of show. Dogs tend to prefer a different color scheme with animated sequences and low noise levels. Help your employees’ dogs relax by playing a 24-hour stream of highly researched content designed specifically for dogs.

    DOGTV may not look appealing to people, but the muted colors are designed to stand out to canine viewers. This canine streaming app has 4.2 stars on the Apple App Store and provides a fun, safe distraction for dogs who can’t be with their owners at all hours of the day. If you want to provide your employees with a restful place to relax and recover from burnout, they could even spend some time in your at-work doggy daycare.

    Stream on up to four devices simultaneously with a wide range of compatibility. Put DOGTV on your iOS or Android phone, in your browser, or on various smartTV apps.

    Let your employees bring their dogs to work and see how morale improves around the office. Get a lifetime subscription to DOGTV for the best price online, just $149 (reg. $838).

    Prices subject to change.

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  • Price hikes are double whammy for pet owners who are crushed by inflation | CNN Business

    Price hikes are double whammy for pet owners who are crushed by inflation | CNN Business

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    Minneapolis
    CNN
     — 

    As head of PAWS Atlanta, Joe Labriola can get a good sense of the region’s economic well-being from the day-to-day activity of the city’s oldest no-kill animal shelter.

    Through the course of the past year, it’s become increasingly clear to him that people in the area are struggling under the weight of inflation and economic uncertainty.

    Practically the entirety of the daily call volume consists of requests to rehome pets. The shelter’s “surrender queue” is full, awaiting adoptions to free up space in the main shelter. And the shelves at PAWS Atlanta’s Pet Food Pantry quickly go bare.

    But perhaps the most heartbreaking indicator is something this particular shelter never had to track before 2022. Last year, 166 pets were found abandoned at the shelter’s front gate.

    “A number of animals are being abandoned that have serious medical issues,” Labriola told CNN. “The only thing we can guess is that people just can’t afford those expenses, and they’re hoping by dropping off [their pets] at our facility that we’re going to be able to pick up the slack. And we do as best we can, but it’s really putting a strain on our resources.”

    Overall inflation remains high across the United States, but has slowly and methodically stepped down since setting a fresh 40-year record of 9.1% in June 2022, as measured by the Consumer Price Index. However, during the past eight months, inflation in pet-related products and services has only worsened, rising in some cases to record-setting levels.

    In February, when annual CPI declined to 6%, the catch-all “pets, pet products and services” index rose to 10.9%, veterinary services jumped nearly 2 percentage points to 10.3% and pet food increased to 15.2%, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data.

    Those price increases are a double whammy for pet owners whose household finances have been weakened by persistently high inflation and for those who fear for rising instances of “economic euthanasia,” when animals are humanely put to death for financial reasons.

    The recent pet-specific price spikes also are compounding pressures facing organizations tasked with providing a safety net for animals in need.

    Nationwide, shelters are not seeing increases in pets being surrendered, said Kitty Block, chief executive officer and president of the Humane Society of the United States. However, when there are certain communities seeing spikes in abandoned or surrendered pets, that’s a sign of broader societal hardship, she said.

    “When people are having to surrender their animals for economic reasons or because they’re in the middle of a horrible disaster or war zone area, that’s a people problem; this is not some issue that is not relevant to people,” Block said. “This is bigger than dogs or cats in shelters. It’s about the people who love them.”

    At the store level, many pet products saw double-digit average unit price increases during the past year, with several items — including pet food, non-clumping cat litter and bird grooming items — seeing year-over-year price hikes north of 20%, according to Nielsen IQ data for the 52-week period ended January 28, 2023.

    “Throughout 2022, price increases were pretty extensive — all the way up to 20% and almost 30% price hikes versus the year prior — across the pet department,” said Andrea Binder, vice president of NielsenIQ North America. “In early 2023, we have started to see those start to taper off a little bit. Prices are still increasing but at a lower rate than they were in 2022.”

    The price hikes have been attributed to rising input and ingredient costs, she added.

    “The cost of chicken, the cost of beef, the cost of aluminum to make a wet cat food can … a lot of those commodity prices have been rising pretty dramatically throughout 2021 and 2022, which has caused manufacturers to increase their costs, and then therefore a lot of retailers follow suit,” she said.

    Linda Harding's dogs, Lola and Phoebe.

    Pet products, services and food have become “exponentially” more expensive, said Linda Harding, who lives in San Diego with two dogs. She said her pet food costs for Lola, her Australian Shepherd mix, and for Phoebe, her Golden Retriever, have doubled to $250 per month.

    Harding has cut back on her own expenses. She hasn’t turned on the heat much all winter, she’s limited electricity use and she has stopped buying items like clothes and eggs.

    “When you take on a pet, you take on a big responsibility,” she said. “It’s almost like when you buy a car, you’re going to have a lot of responsibility with that car. That car is going to break down, that car’s going to need repairs. It’s an investment.”

    She added: “And they’re our furbabies. We love them to pieces. So it’s not really even a question. I need to find the money to keep them as healthy as possible so we can love them as long as possible.”

    Mary Avila, a disabled veteran who lives on a fixed income, keeps things simple.

    She doesn’t go clothes shopping anymore, she buys cheaper cuts of meat, and she does try to sock away money in case her pets need a small medical procedure.

    “They always give,” said Avila, who lives in Bakersfield, California, with her cat, Jack, and two dogs, Domino and Squirt. “The cat doesn’t give as much, because cats. But the dogs, they always give, they’re always happy, they always want you around. They always are there for you.”

    Patricia Kelvin of Poland, Ohio, said her Social Security benefits and pension can only go so far, so when the cost of utilities, food or trash collection go up, she has to cut back.

    But not for her cat, Jesse.

    Patricia Kelvin's cat, Jesse.

    “If he had some major medical concern, there are a lot of things I would give up so he would get care,” she said. “There’s just no question in my mind. If my diet was going to be more beans than something else, I wouldn’t hesitate. If I had to sell my sterling silver, which I’ve had for 60 years, that would go before my little ‘Whiskers’ would be deprived.”

    The Animal Rescue League of Iowa is the largest nonprofit rescue organization in the Hawkeye State and adopted out 8,400 dogs, cats and small farm animals throughout last year.

    As pet support services manager, Josh Fiala’s role at ARL is to help keep animals out of the shelter by offering programs — such as a pet food pantry, vaccine clinics, veterinary assistance and crisis care — to help keep pets with their people.

    “We definitely, without question, have seen a dramatic increase in pretty much every one of those services,” he said, noting that the pet food pantry in particular has seen spikes in demand.

    Josh Fiala, Animal Rescue League of Iowa's Pet Support Services Manager, helps load pet food into a vehicle during a Pet Food Pantry in January 2022.

    ARL gave out about 40,000 pounds of pet food in both 2020 and 2021. Last year, it distributed 146,000 pounds of food.

    Waggle, a pet-dedicated crowdfunding platform for medical expenses and emergencies, has seen recent spikes in the volume of postings on its website — with some of the biggest increases coming from pet owners in rural communities and areas with high costs of living, said Steven Mornelli, chief executive officer and founder. Additionally, Waggle has also seen a 30% increase in posting for help with medical bills $250 and under, he told CNN.

    “We have taken that as a correlation with the stresses of inflation,” he said.

    In 2022, 4% more animals entered shelters than left, according to Shelter Animals Count, a national database of animal shelter statistics launched by some of the largest animal welfare organizations in the United States.

    That’s the largest gap seen in the past four years and is the result of fewer pets leaving shelters, not increases in surrenders, said Christa Chadwick, vice president of shelter services at the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

    Adoption levels have remained essentially flat, but there has been a large decline in animals being transferred to other shelters because of staffing and driver shortages, she added.

    Joey, a shelter dog at Baypath Humane Society in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, on April 9, 2021.

    But she also highlighted the economic pressures affecting current and prospective pet owners.

    “It’s heartbreaking to know that there are situations where pet owners are being put in a position where they are making a decision about their pet, whether it’s to surrender that pet to an animal shelter or they have to make a decision about euthanasia because they can’t afford care, she said.

    “People tend to get angry at the pet owner when they [abandon or surrender their pet] but our experience has shown that when pet owners get to that point, it’s the only option they see available to them,” Chadwick. “And that’s real, and that’s hard for everybody involved, and that’s really hard for the animal who’s at the center of that.”

    Chadwick sees a role for shelters and other organizations to provide a safe and welcoming place for owners who may feel like they have no other option.

    Despite the broader economic challenges occurring within the US, PAWS Atlanta’s Labriola has had its share of feel-good success stories this year.

    PAWS Atlanta's staff members take care of pets during a public vaccine clinic on February 23.

    Donations have remained strong as has the volunteer program, he said. The low-cost public vaccination and spay and neuter clinics are sold out, indicating that people are taking advantage of inexpensive ways to care for their pets, he added.

    And just recently, the shelter’s focus of working with dogs who have been there for more than a year, or “long-term guests,” is starting to pay off, he said.

    “We’ve been able to place three long-termers into forever homes recently, freeing up space to rescue more homeless dogs,” he said.

    • Shelters, veterinarians and local rescue groups can serve as first points of contact.
    • The Humane Society of the United States’ website has a variety of resources for people facing financial challenges and need vet care, food, boarding, supplies and information to help keep pets with their families. The website has a list of national, state and local organizations.
    • Inquire if veterinarians accept Care Credit, ScratchPay or a similar service but be sure to carefully review the terms of repayment and how interest rates would be applied.
    • Ask if your veterinarian has a client-driven donation fund to help other clients in need; consider fundraising platforms such as Waggle and GoFundMe
    • Consider purchasing pet health insurance.

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  • French bulldog named the most popular dog breed in the U.S.

    French bulldog named the most popular dog breed in the U.S.

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    French bulldog named the most popular dog breed in the U.S. – CBS News


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    The French bulldog has been named the most popular dog breed of 2022 by the American Kennel Club.

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  • Survival of the friendliest: How dogs evolved to be man’s best friend | 60 Minutes

    Survival of the friendliest: How dogs evolved to be man’s best friend | 60 Minutes

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    Survival of the friendliest: How dogs evolved to be man’s best friend | 60 Minutes – CBS News


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    Anderson Cooper reports on the evolution of dogs from wild wolves to domesticated pets and what this might tell us about human evolution.

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  • Pet of the Week: Meadow

    Pet of the Week: Meadow

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    Meadow, a gorgeous 9-year-old female, came to SPCA of the Triad from a local shelter where she was found as a stray. This sweet girl is super affectionate and would be an excellent lap kitty. Meadow is really not interested in interacting other cats, although she does tolerate them. She can be a bit nervous and likes to stick to her comfort area. Meadow also enjoys sunbathing. Meadow does not like to be picked up, but she loves to be petted. Her adoption fee is $125. For information, visit www.triadspca.org.

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  • Cat Returned To Shelter For Being ‘Too Affectionate’ Now Thriving In New Home

    Cat Returned To Shelter For Being ‘Too Affectionate’ Now Thriving In New Home

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    A cuddly cat whose affection was too much for one family has finally found his perfect match.

    Bruno, a buff-colored tabby in New Jersey, went viral late last month after the Montville Animal Shelter posted on Facebook about the cat’s adoption and subsequent return.

    “Sad news Bruno came back after only a week!” the shelter wrote. “The family never had a cat before and said he was too affectionate, always wanted to sit on their laps, follow them around, and head-butt them for kisses and pets.”

    The shelter also wrote that Bruno was “too playful” for the family and “got zoomies in the evening,” referring to the bursts of energy that can make cats run around in a frenzy.

    But Bruno’s big personality made him the perfect pet for another couple in the state. The couple, identified by their first names Catherine and Andrew, told NorthJersey.com in a story published on Friday that they first saw Bruno online before the animal shelter’s Facebook post went viral.

    “A few hours later, [Catherine] sends me a screenshot of the post with like a thousand shares, freaking out like ‘What if we don’t get him? What if he got too famous,’” Andrew told the website.

    There was so much interest in Bruno that the shelter had to pause applications for him. But Catherine and Andrew were the ones who ultimately took him home. He’s settling in well, and his new family finds it “adorable” when he wakes them up by headbutting them.

    “When we first picked him up, he basically crawled into my neck … I think he was very excited to leave the shelter and be held again,” Catherine said.

    But while only one family could be Bruno’s lucky new adopters, his story also helped other cats at the shelter find homes, staff member Lindsay Persico told NorthJersey.com in a previous article. So many people hoped to meet Bruno, she said, that “almost all” of the shelter’s cats got adopted.

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  • To save our pets, we need to know our neighbors’ Lessons from an urban firestorm

    To save our pets, we need to know our neighbors’ Lessons from an urban firestorm

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    Newswise — More than 1,000 pets perished in the Dec. 30 Marshall Fire in Boulder County, Colo., many of them trapped inside their homes as guardians who had left for the day desperately tried to devise a plan to free them, according to new CU Boulder research published in the journal Animals.

    With more rapid-onset natural disasters likely to come, the authors have a message for owners wanting to keep their animals as safe as possible: Make an evacuation plan for your pets, and if you can’t be home to carry it out, designate someone to help.

    “My main takeaway is that to save our pets, we need to know our neighbors,” said study co-author Leslie Irvine, a sociology professor at CU Boulder and author of the book, Filling the Ark: Animal Welfare in Disasters.

    A different kind of disaster
    The Marshall Fire was not the first disaster to take a stunning toll on animal companions.

    As part of her decades of research on the human-animal connection, Irvine touched down in New Orleans just days after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 to find that guardians were often forced to evacuate without their pets, and even when they got them out, public transportation or accommodations often prohibited them.

    An estimated 200,000 pets were left stranded.

    Policymakers have since recognized that leaving pets behind takes a potent emotional toll on people and can put them and emergency rescue personnel in greater danger. (One survey found that 62% of pet owners would defy evacuation orders if they couldn’t find a place for their pets.)

    Federal legislation now requires state and local emergency response plans to incorporate pets into disaster planning, and shelters are more likely to take them.
    “There has been progress,” said Irvine.

    But the Marshall Fire presented an unprecedented challenge: The grass fire turned urban firestorm came on extraordinarily fast, destroying 1,000 homes in a tightly packed urban neighborhood in a matter of hours on a winter weekday when many homeowners were at work or traveling.

    “As tragic as Katrina was, there was warning,” Irvine said. “With this, people woke up on a windy morning, and six hours later two communities had burned to the ground.”

    A grim count
    In the weeks after the fire, which destroyed 1,048 homes, Irvine scoured traditional and social media accounts, public emergency information documents and posts from the Marshall Fire Lost and Found Pets Facebook group. She also conducted in-depth interviews with staff members from animal shelters and individuals who lost animals in the fire.

    A precise count of fatalities proved impossible, due to a lack of pet license requirements in many regions hit by the fire.

    But using data from the American Veterinary Medical Association and other sources, the authors estimate that about 1,182 animals were affected by the fire, almost all of them fatally.

    “In sum, it appears that the majority of animals were not rescued,” the study concludes, pointing to the fire’s unusual behavior, coupled with widely reported pitfalls in the emergency notification system for the high fatality rate.

    ‘It’s the pets we grieve’
    For those left behind, the emotional toll has been profound.

    One study interviewee reported that the drive from his workplace to his neighborhood, which normally took 15 minutes, took two hours. By the time he got there to rescue his cat, he couldn’t access his home.

    In another instance, a family visiting from Chicago had brought their two Labrador retrievers along with them and left them briefly in their vacation rental. Because they didn’t live in the area, they didn’t receive an emergency notification. The dogs, Reggie and Packer, perished in the fire.

    One other interviewee visited her lost home for days looking for her three dogs and a cat.

    “Despite losing everything,” she told Irvine, “It’s the pets we grieve.”

    An action plan and a new app
    Irvine said that the study provides a powerful reminder of the need to include pets in emergency planning.

    But she adds that even the most comprehensive plans would have been of little use in the Marshall Fire, because so many owners were away, and it came on so fast.

    With this in mind, Irvine is helping the nonprofit Animal Help Now design a Pet Help and Rescue App (PHAR), due out this Spring, to swiftly connect pet guardians with trusted contacts who have permission to enter their homes.

    “When disaster strikes and you are away and can’t get home, you can, with the press of a button, alert people that your animal needs rescued,” said organization founder David Crawford, who came up with the idea after he fled the Marshall Fire, his two cats safely in tow.

    Before leaving his neighborhood, which had just begun to grow smoky, he knocked on a neighbor’s door and discovered his German Shepherd was inside alone. After contacting the owner on Facebook, Crawford and another neighbor kicked the door down and rescued the dog.

    Other animals weren’t as fortunate.

    “In one square block that I drove around, there was a cockatiel, a tortoise, a turtle, three cats and two dogs,” Crawford said, adding that had he known how to get in, he could have done more. “I had time. I could have conceivably saved all those animals.”

     

    7 ways to prep your pets for an emergency

    • Keep collars, leashes, carriers, medication and extra food in a designated place.
    • Scan and upload veterinary records and pet registrations to the cloud.
    • Keep recent photos of you and your pet together in case they go missing and to verify ownership.
    • Microchip your pet.
    • Be sure pets are up to date on vaccinations so they can access shelters.
    • Know which hotels in your area are pet friendly.
    • Let trusted neighbors know how to access your house and where your pet supplies are.

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  • “It’s me!” fish recognizes itself in photographs

    “It’s me!” fish recognizes itself in photographs

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    Newswise — A research team led by Specially Appointed Professor Masanori Kohda from the Graduate School of Science at the Osaka Metropolitan University has demonstrated that fish think “it’s me” when they see themselves in a picture, for the first time in animals. The researchers found that the determining factor was not seeing their own body but seeing their face. These findings have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    In this study, relevant experiments were conducted with Labroides dimidiatus, commonly known as a cleaner fish, which are known to be able to recognize themselves in mirrors and regularly attack other unfamiliar cleaner fish who intrude on their territory. Each cleaner fish was presented with four photographs: a photo of themselves; a photo of an unfamiliar cleaner; a photo of their own face on an unfamiliar cleaner’s body; and a photo of unfamiliar cleaner’s face on their own body. Interestingly, the cleaner fish did not attack photos with their own faces but did attack those with the faces of unfamiliar cleaner fish. Together these results indicate that the cleaner fish determined who was in the photograph based on the face in the photo but not the body in the similar way humans do.

    To negate the possibility that the fish considered photographs of themselves as very close companions, a photograph mark-test was conducted. Fish were presented with a photograph where a parasite-like mark was placed on their throat. Six of the eight individuals that saw the photograph of themselves with a parasite mark were observed to rub their throats to clean it off. While showing those same fish pictures of themselves without parasite marks or of a familiar cleaner fish with parasite marks did not cause them to rub their throats.

    “This study is the first to demonstrate that fish have an internal sense of self. Since the target animal is a fish, this finding suggests that nearly all social vertebrates also have this higher sense of self,” stated Professor Kohda.

    ###

    About OMU

    Osaka Metropolitan University is a new public university established by a merger between Osaka City University and Osaka Prefecture University in April 2022. For more science news, see https://www.omu.ac.jp/en/, and follow @OsakaMetUniv_en and #OMUScience.

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  • Pet of the Week: Dre

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    The Animal Rescue & Foster Program has promised him a new home for Valentines Day!

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  • Pet of the Week: Dre

    Pet of the Week: Dre

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    The Animal Rescue & Foster Program has promised him a new home for Valentines Day!

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  • How to Manage Cash Flow for Your Home Pet Business

    How to Manage Cash Flow for Your Home Pet Business

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    Rich Mintzer’s new book, Start Your Own Pet Business, outlines everything you need to know about launching and growing an animal-based business from your home. In this excerpt, he dives into the specifics of managing your finances to keep your business as healthy and happy as your tail-wagging clients.

    Sign up for an accounting workshop

    No matter if you are caring for two dogs or two hundred, every business needs to keep track of money coming in and money going out. One way to make the accounting and financial framework of your business less daunting is to take an accounting class. You can find many online classes, as well as articles, on basic accounting and/or managing finances for a small business. You can also check with your local Small Business Development Center (SBDC), which may offer small-business accounting classes or keep a list of classes offered through local community colleges or continuing-education programs at a local university. Be logical when you sign up for an accounting class—don’t sign up for a class that covers information beyond your current need or ability to understand. You don’t need to know how to read the financial report of a $60 million international company to run your $20,000 local pet-sitting operation.

    Keep receipts

    If you have ever had even the smallest business or if you have ever worked for anyone else, you probably have heard this before, but it bears repeating: Keep every receipt for any dime you spend on the business. Keep them in one place and record them in your ledger at least weekly. These records tell you a lot about your business. You may notice patterns, expenditures that seem excessive, or other changes you could make for your business to be more efficient.

    Related: Dive deeper with Start Your Own Pet Business on sale now

    Set up a separate checking account

    Because pet-sitting businesses often don’t take a lot of capital to set up, you have to be careful not to fall into the trap of starting your business and simply using your personal checking account to pay for expenses and to deposit income. Set up a separate checking account and designate it for the business. Pay for everything with this account, even if you use its debit card instead of actually writing a check. It doesn’t have to be a “business” checking account—another personal account will do—just give the business an account all its own. Not only is it good for keeping accurate track of expenses, but some psychological aspects result from having separate accounts and ledgers for taking yourself and your business seriously. Have the business name printed on your business-specific checking account—it lends an air of professionalism.

    Get bookkeeping software

    Many software programs exist for easy setup of bookkeeping for your small business. Two commonly used ones are QuickBooks and Microsoft Office. Set aside a large chunk of time to get yourself set up, and then set aside time on an ongoing basis, maybe an hour weekly and a morning monthly. Be sure to keep these software products up-to-date by signing up for automatic updates or reminders so you can keep as up-to-date as possible. Although the bookkeeping programs probably won’t have as much in the way of updates, tax programs have constant updates. If you know yourself well enough to know you are not going to set aside this time to feed your bookkeeping software, then hire an accountant. The same goes for tax time. You may want to enlist a small business tax expert to decipher what expenses can and can not be deducted, at least for the first year of running your business.

    Creating invoices and receipts

    Even if you require payment on the spot, you always want to provide your client with an invoice for your services. This allows both of you to keep a record of your visits. Depending on how fast your business plan shows your business increasing revenue and adding clients, you may want to think early on about having client software that keeps records of your clients. If you look to have only ten clients for the first year, you could create a spreadsheet using Excel or Google Sheets. As you grow, you may want to invest in a business software package. Besides generating invoices, it keeps an easy-to-access history of services you provided.

    Related: Pet Lovers, Here’s How to Get Your Dream Business or Side Hustle Started

    Payment options

    The easiest manner in which to collect money in a business such as pet-sitting might be good old cash or a simple account transfer via an app like Venmo or PayPal because your fees are typically for only a few hours at a time. As your company grows, you’ll want to look into having credit card options, such as the easy-to-use Square payment system, which allows you to use your cell phone as a mobile cash register (https://squareup.com). This will entail setting up a credit card merchant account, a bank account, and a way to process payments. Some startup payment fees and fees per transaction (which are usually around 2 to 4 percent) apply. The merchant account will allow you to accept payments through Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and other credit card companies. You can Google merchant services and compare options.

    Paying yourself

    One of the perks of opening a low-cost, no-overhead business is you can usually start taking some money for yourself early on while putting the rest into the business. If you know your ongoing expenses, you can cover them and have some money left over. If, however, you are looking to build a large pet-sitting business with offices and many employees, then—like most startups—you will need to put nearly all the money earned back into the business for the first year or two. This means you need to have some money set aside to help you pay your bills when starting the business. If you can afford to do this, that’s great—you should probably plan to do this for at least the first year, depending on how complex a business you establish.

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    Entrepreneur Staff

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Sometimes All It Takes is a Bag of Food to Keep…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Sometimes All It Takes is a Bag of Food to Keep…

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    Feb 08, 2023

    What can 24 pallets of donated pet food do? It can connect a community, build a community, and keep the individuals in that community fed and safe.

    In 2022, APA! became a benefiting partner of a program created by the Humane Society of the United States and Chewy that connects Chewy’s warehouse returns to shelter partners in need. This collaboration has helped build upon our expanding PASS (Positive Alternative to Shelter Surrender) program, which has seen extreme growth over the last few years.

    A large delivery that we welcomed to our main location will make its way across Austin in a few stages. First, our friends at Austin Humane Society have collected eight pallets that will help stock one of their quarterly food banks. Next, several partnering organizations—multiple rescues, food pantries, and municipal partners—will come to APA! to load up supplies to support their efforts. And finally, APA! will welcome community members in need to load up supplies that may mean the difference between keeping their pet or having to rehome.

    When a community member is facing hard times, they may find themselves having to make the hard and heartbreaking decision to find a new home for their beloved pet. The last three years have been an eye-opener for so many, and for APA!, we saw the gap our community, and communities beyond Austin, have in providing support for a family that includes pets. Our PASS program, which had been quietly running in the background for years, shifted to a program that we recognized needed fast growth and that we needed to bring to the foreground of operations—so we could support people and pets in our community, and keep families together.

    In 2022, this “little program that could” raised over $44,000 for community members who needed medical support or pet deposit support in order to keep their pet, distributed over $300,000 worth of supplies and foods to various shelters and rescue partners, fulfilled 400+ individual pet pantry orders which served over 1500 pet family members and, when rehoming a pet was the best option for all parties, intaked a little over 1000 pets, typically, directly into foster homes.

    We’re honored to be a central hub partner for the HSUS and Chewy donation program as a way to continue to support our community members when they need a helping hand.

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  • Pet of the Week: Jaxx

    Pet of the Week: Jaxx

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    Meet the amazing Jaxx, a senior chihuahua looking for a family to spend the rest of his days with. He is a sweet, laid-back man, looking for a warm place to sleep and plenty of attention. Yes, he is a hefty fellow, but he’s on a healthier diet and is already losing weight. Due to his current stature, steps are a challenge. He can get down them but not up, so he will need a little help in that department until he reaches a healthier weight. He is housebroken, crate trained and will make an exceptional companion for the right family. He coexists fine with other dogs, too. To begin the adoption process, apply at reddogfarm.com. His adoption fee is $250.

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  • Pet of the Week: Jaxx

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    This doggie will need help with stairs until he loses a little weight.

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