Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogs

Despite their important role in security, little is known about the energy requirements of working dogs such as odor, explosive and human detection dogs. Previous researchers have evaluated the energy requirements of individual canine breeds as well as dogs in exercise roles such as sprint racing. T...

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Main Authors: Rebecca A. Mullis, Angela L. Witzel, Joshua Price
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2015-02-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/767.pdf
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author Rebecca A. Mullis
Angela L. Witzel
Joshua Price
author_facet Rebecca A. Mullis
Angela L. Witzel
Joshua Price
author_sort Rebecca A. Mullis
collection DOAJ
description Despite their important role in security, little is known about the energy requirements of working dogs such as odor, explosive and human detection dogs. Previous researchers have evaluated the energy requirements of individual canine breeds as well as dogs in exercise roles such as sprint racing. This study is the first to evaluate the energy requirements of working dogs trained in odor, explosive and human detection. This retrospective study evaluated twenty adult dogs who maintained consistent body weights over a six month period. During this time, the average energy consumption was $136\pm 38~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$136±38kcal⋅BWkg0.75 or two times the calculated resting energy requirement ($\mathrm{RER}=70~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$RER=70kcal⋅BWkg0.75). No statistical differences were found between breeds, age or sex, but a statistically significant association (p = 0.0033, R-square = 0.0854) was seen between the number of searches a dog performs and their energy requirement. Based on this study’s population, it appears that working dogs have maintenance energy requirements similar to the 1974 National Research Council’s (NRC) maintenance energy requirement of $132~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$132kcal⋅BWkg0.75 (National Research Council (NRC), 1974) and the $139\pm 42~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$139±42kcal⋅BWkg0.75 reported for young laboratory beagles (Rainbird & Kienzle, 1990). Additional research is needed to determine if these data can be applied to all odor, explosive and human detection dogs and to determine if other types of working dogs (tracking, search and rescue etc.) have similar energy requirements.
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spelling doaj.art-c3b244645bc74b00bc28347fa3179ec82023-12-03T11:18:15ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592015-02-013e76710.7717/peerj.767767Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogsRebecca A. Mullis0Angela L. Witzel1Joshua Price2Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine, Knoxville, TN, USADepartment of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine, Knoxville, TN, USAOffice of Information Technology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, USADespite their important role in security, little is known about the energy requirements of working dogs such as odor, explosive and human detection dogs. Previous researchers have evaluated the energy requirements of individual canine breeds as well as dogs in exercise roles such as sprint racing. This study is the first to evaluate the energy requirements of working dogs trained in odor, explosive and human detection. This retrospective study evaluated twenty adult dogs who maintained consistent body weights over a six month period. During this time, the average energy consumption was $136\pm 38~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$136±38kcal⋅BWkg0.75 or two times the calculated resting energy requirement ($\mathrm{RER}=70~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$RER=70kcal⋅BWkg0.75). No statistical differences were found between breeds, age or sex, but a statistically significant association (p = 0.0033, R-square = 0.0854) was seen between the number of searches a dog performs and their energy requirement. Based on this study’s population, it appears that working dogs have maintenance energy requirements similar to the 1974 National Research Council’s (NRC) maintenance energy requirement of $132~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$132kcal⋅BWkg0.75 (National Research Council (NRC), 1974) and the $139\pm 42~\mathrm{kcal}\cdot {\mathrm{BW}}_{\mathrm{kg}}^{0.75}$139±42kcal⋅BWkg0.75 reported for young laboratory beagles (Rainbird & Kienzle, 1990). Additional research is needed to determine if these data can be applied to all odor, explosive and human detection dogs and to determine if other types of working dogs (tracking, search and rescue etc.) have similar energy requirements.https://peerj.com/articles/767.pdfCanineNutritionMetabolismEnergyDogVeterinary
spellingShingle Rebecca A. Mullis
Angela L. Witzel
Joshua Price
Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogs
PeerJ
Canine
Nutrition
Metabolism
Energy
Dog
Veterinary
title Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogs
title_full Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogs
title_fullStr Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogs
title_full_unstemmed Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogs
title_short Maintenance energy requirements of odor detection, explosive detection and human detection working dogs
title_sort maintenance energy requirements of odor detection explosive detection and human detection working dogs
topic Canine
Nutrition
Metabolism
Energy
Dog
Veterinary
url https://peerj.com/articles/767.pdf
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AT joshuaprice maintenanceenergyrequirementsofodordetectionexplosivedetectionandhumandetectionworkingdogs