Microchips Help Lost Dogs be
Found
There is not much of anything in the world than the sight of a
child who is grieving a lost dog.
Teary-eyed and depressed, yet hopeful, she goes around the
neighborhood tacking Xeroxed signs to telephone poles, pleading for
the safe return of her beloved pet, all the time knowing that the
odds are stacked against her and her dog.
Over the years there have been various methods enacted to try
and raise the number of lost pets that are reunited with their
owners. Dog licensing and tag laws are one way that local
governments have tried to help, but they don’t work very well at
all. If a lost dog has lost its identification tag it is
nearly impossible for anyone to find the dog’s owner.
For many years the owners of show dogs have used tattoos to put
permanent identifying marks of their dogs. The tattoo is
placed on the skin of the inner thigh, near the abdomen and
contains a unique number assigned by the American Kennel
Club. The tattoos aren’t readily visible to the average
person, however, and shelter employees seldom check for tattoos on
the “strays” that are brought to them on a daily basis.
A newer method of dog identification hopes to put an end to the
number of lost dogs that can’t be reunited with their owners, or at
least reduce it significantly. A microchip is inserted under
the dog’s skin near the shoulder. This chip contains encoded
data about the dog and its owner that may then be read by a
scanner. It is a more permanent method than a simple metal
tag, less painful and inconvenient to the dog than tattooing,
and has a higher success rate than any other method when it comes
to getting lost dogs back together with their owners.
The method isn’t perfect; some microchips may shift over time
and become unreadable to scanners and there is the possibility,
however remote, that the microchip can become demagnetized.
It is the best method developed so far and is now being used all
over the world.
Insertion of the microchip is a simple and nearly pain free
process for the dog. Unlike tattooing, which requires the dog
to be restrained and often shaved, implantation of the microchip is
similar to an injection. After a tiny pinprick, its over and
the dog can now be identified at any shelter equipped with the
scanning device. The information on the chip is unique to the
dog and the owner and makes a reunion a high probability instead of
a remote possibility.
Thanks to microchip technology, we may have seen the last child
crying over her lost dog and that would be a Very Good Thing.
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