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.