Sentences with phrase «implanted microchip number»

Not exact matches

Your dog will come with the microchip implanted already and the tag / microchip number attached to the vet paperwork.
However, many shelters and laboratories now routinely scan strays they receive for microchips, and even if you haven't listed your dog with a registry, the lab or shelter can still find the owner of a chipped dog by tracing the code number to the veterinarian who implanted the chip.
It can only be «turned on» for a few seconds at a time by a handheld microchip scanner that is passed over the area the microchip is implanted to read the microchip's unique ID number.
Your veterinarian will implant the chip between your cat's shoulder blades and you can register the number with a national registry, the microchip company or local animal control.
The veterinary hospital where the microchip is implanted records the pet's information and it's unique microchip identification number.
If you move or change your phone number, contact the microchip manufacturer to have your pet's implant updated.
A microchip is a very small chip implanted under the skin, between the shoulder blades of your pet and contains a unique number assigned to your pet.
If you do already have a microchip implanted in your pet, please remember to make sure that your registration service always has your correct phone number.
A microchip is implanted underneath the skin, and once the microchip is in place the number is registered to a database linking the pet to the owner.
About the size of a grain of rice, identification microchips are encoded with a personalized number specific to your pet and implanted beneath the skin, usually between the shoulder blades.
Did you know that when a microchip is implanted all it contains is the chip number itself?
A microchip is a small chip implanted under the skin of a dog or cat with a registered database number that includes the contact information of the pet's owner.
They also include the assignment of a 15 - digit numeric identification code to each microchip; 3 digits either for the code of the country in which the dog was implanted or for the manufacturer's code; one digit for the dog's category (optional), and the remaining 8 or 9 digits for that dog's unique ID number.
Some shelters implant microchips into every animal they adopt out, so check with the shelter and find out your new pet's microchip number so you can get it registered in your name.
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