Mar. 27,
2013 — From sniffing out bombs and weapons to uncovering criminal
evidence, dogs can help save lives and keep the peace. Now, researchers have
uncovered how to improve dogs' smelling skills through diet, by cutting protein
and adding fats.
Such a diet,
say the researchers, appears to help dogs return to lower body temperatures
after exercise, which reduces panting and, thereby, improves sniffing.
The findings
could change how detection dogs are fed and boost their detection abilities,
says Joseph Wakshlag, associate professor of clinical studies and chief of
nutrition at Cornell's College
of Veterinary Medicine .
Wakshlag, who collaborated with researchers at Auburn
University , is presenting the findings
at the Companion Animal Nutrition Summit in Atlanta , held March 22-24.
The study,
funded with a $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, also found
that detection dogs are more reliable detectors than previously thought. The
study is the first to be conducted in the world's only detection dog research
facility designed in conjunction with a military dog trainer. The Alabama facility, which
provides expert detection dogs to police and military forces, flushes out fumes
between tests, ensuring a fresh field each time.
"Previous
studies from other facilities, which lack this feature, had suggested detection
dogs signaling for suspect substances are about 70 percent accurate," said
Wakshlag. "The lower numbers may have been due to study design flaws which
our new study overcame. Dogs tested in the new facility signaled with 90
percent and above accuracy. We also found we can push detection performance
even further with the right kind of food."
Bucking
conventional thinking, the group found that less protein and more fat in the
dogs' diet helped trained dogs perform better in exercise and detection tests.
During an 18-month period, they rotated 17 trained dogs through three diets
Wakshlag selected: a high-end performance diet, regular adult dog food, and
regular adult dog food diluted with corn oil. Measuring how different diets
affected each dog, they found that dogs eating the normal diet enhanced with
corn oil returned to normal body temperatures most quickly after exercise and
were better able to detect smokeless powder, ammonia nitrate and TNT.
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