http://malaysiandogsdeservebetter.blogspot.com/2011/07/evil-human-who-cut-off-this-dogs-nose.html
http://malaysiandogsdeservebetter.blogspot.com/2011/07/citta-is-improving-by-day.html
http://malaysiandogsdeservebetter.blogspot.com/2011/07/citta-is-doing-well.html
http://malaysiandogsdeservebetter.blogspot.com/2011/07/she-will-survive-without-nose.html
http://malaysiandogsdeservebetter.blogspot.com/2011/07/citta-is-doing-well.html
http://malaysiandogsdeservebetter.blogspot.com/2011/07/she-will-survive-without-nose.html
For those who sincerely wants to provide Mimi a home and willing to love her for the rest of her life, please contact MDDB (Malaysian Dogs Deserve Better) at their facebook page. http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/pages/Malaysian-Dogs-Deserve-Better/64173243307
Special thanks to MDDB and all its independent rescuers, the Vets and all those who had donated and who had offered Mimi what she needed most during her most distressed moments.
Now back to Why Is A Dog's Nose So Important To Them?...
"A dog can tell you a lot about the outdoors. When Jane, my Lab, vacuums the ground with her nose and her tail moves like a helicopter blade, I know a grouse is about to fly. When Jane stops as abruptly as a dragonfly, then runs off sniffing an invisible path, I know a snowshoe hare has crossed our trail.
All this entertainment is courtesy of that most sensitive appendage, a dog's nose. It's an instrument man has not been able to duplicate. A local search-and-rescue group, PAWS, uses dogs to find lost people, dead people, and people buried under earth and snow. Dogs have also been used to find gas leaks and the presence of gypsy moth egg sacks. A researcher here at the University of Alaska Fairbanks even wants to train a dog to find tiny wood frogs hibernating in the duff.
SAR dog at World Trade Center, New York on 9/11/2001 |
Dogs noses work much the way ours do: We inhale molecules of odor, which then dissolve in mucus. The dissolved odors are picked up by the olfactory receptors, located behind where sunglasses rest on the nose. An organ called the olfactory bulb shunts the chemical messages straight to the part of the brain that deals with stored feelings and memories, bypassing the cerebral cortex, the main part of the brain. This short-circuit is one reason smells so rapidly trigger strong emotions and memories that may have lain dormant for years.
With its larger olfactory membranes, a dog's nose does amazing things. Researchers at Duke University found that a randomly selected fox terrier could after three weeks detect the scent of a fingerprint on a glass slide when compared to four clean slides. When the researchers placed the slides outside in the rain and dust, the dog was still able to pick out the slide with the fingerprint after 24 hours of weathering.
Dogs have fantastic tracking ability because humans leave a pretty good scent trail. Most researchers think the scent trails consists of "rafts," tiny bits of skin cells that have an odor when mixed with sweat and fed upon by bacteria. Because the human body sheds about 50 million cells each minute, rafts fall from the body like a shower of microscopic confetti. Dogs quickly detect these rafts, as well as other scents that may not be apparent to the producer, including breath and sweat vapor. Each person's scent trail is unique, and dogs are remarkably good at separating one person's trail from another's.
Seventy years after Romanes' study, H. Kalmus performed a similar test using identical twins. The twins must have had quite similar scents, Kalmus reported: "if the dog was given the scent of one twin, it would happily follow the other." When both twins were used in the experiment, however, the dog was able to pick one from the other.
What a great tool a dog's nose is--it rarely malfunctions and the body it's attached to is always happy to see you".
No comments:
Post a Comment