Saturday, September 20, 2008

Dog Poop DNA??

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An Israeli city is using DNA analysis of dog droppings to reward and punish pet owners.

Under a six-month trial programme launched this week, the city of Petah Tikva, a suburb of Tel Aviv, is asking dog owners to take their animal to a municipal veterinarian, who then swabs its mouth and collects DNA.

The city will use the DNA database it is building to match faeces to a registered dog and identify its owner.

Owners who scoop up their dogs' droppings and place them in specially marked bins on Petah Tikva's streets will be eligible for rewards of pet food coupons and dog toys.

But droppings found underfoot in the street and matched through the DNA database to a registered pet could earn its owner a municipal fine.

"My goal is to get the residents involved, and tell them that together, we can make our environment clean," said Tika Bar-On, the city's chief veterinarian who came up with the idea for the DNA experiment.

Bar-On said the DNA database could also help veterinarians research genetic diseases in dogs, investigate canine pedigree and identify stray animals, replacing the need for electronic chip identification.

"The sky is the limit on how far we can take this," she said.

So far, Bar-On said, residents have "reacted positively to the program and are cooperating because they want their neighborhood to be clean".

She said Petah Tikva would consider making it mandatory for pet owners to provide DNA samples from their dogs if the trial program is successful.



This seems like this could be an effective program but will every dog owner take part? How accurate is this dropping testing going to be? Say someones pets or pet get out on accident and leaves an unpleasent dropping in an unwanted place. Would the owners be succeptible to a fine? One would wonder how enforced this would be and how serious of a "fine" could be slapped on someone for ignoring thier animal's doo-doo. There are most likely a handful of people who walk thier pets and let them do thier business freely, which would lead me to believe that those owners would avoid the program. With that aside, I must say that using this program to research diseases in dogs is a great idea, and I believe that the possibilities are indeed endless, but the hardest part isint the research, it would be convincing the pet owners to actually get down to the vet and have thier pets swabbed for DNA.

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